Connecting Your Av7005; Video Outputs - Outlaw Marantz AV7005 User Manual

7.1 channel pre-amp/processor
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The Outlaws' Guide to the Marantz AV7005

Connecting Your AV7005

Perhaps the most daunting task in setting up a new home theater component is
connecting it to the other components in your system. This is particularly true for a
surround processor, as it is the hub through which virtually everything passes. The
AV7005 User Manual offers examples for connecting typical components to the
AV7005. We are going to do something similar here, but from a different perspective.
This section will help you connect an AV7005 to a home theater system, starting with
the video display and working back through the video signal path, then turning around
and going from audio inputs back through audio outputs. Along the way, we will offer
some pointers for audio and video record outputs and Zone 2/Zone 3 outputs. Near the
end, we will touch on some miscellaneous connections such as triggers and antennas.
We'll finish with a connection summary sheet that you can use to plan and document
your connections.

Video Outputs

This is the last step in the signal path, but it is a good place to start because it will
determine what connections to make from the source components. After all, the TV is
where it all comes together, and we can't very well hook up an HDMI cable from your
upscaling DVD player if your TV's best video input is a composite video jack. In the
process of identifying the best video output connection for your system, we will define a
series of five Video Display Tiers that will be used when connecting video inputs.
Most AV7005 owners will be connecting the processor to a high definition video display,
so we will begin with the optimal video output connection for such a case. We call that
case Video Display Tier HDMI, which applies to two situations: displays with an HDMI
input, and those that use DVI with HDCP rather than HDMI. If the TV has a DVI input,
check the TV's manual to determine if it supports HDCP (High-Definition Digital Copy
Protection). Many TVs with DVI ports will label the ports as "DVI-HDCP" to make this
clear, but even if the port isn't labeled as such it may still be compatible with HDCP. DVI
ports with HDCP can be treated exactly the same as HDMI ports for our purposes.
Without HDCP, a display will be unable to work with HDCP protected source devices
(HD cable and satellite receivers, upscaling DVD players, and HD-DVD and Blu-ray
players), forcing us to exclude HDMI from our supported video input connections later.
As a result, a DVI-equipped display that lacks HDCP will be our second classification:
Video Display Tier DVI (no HDCP).
The third possible input type available on an HDTV is component video. Most displays
will offer this input type, but you should only use it with the AV7005 if HDMI and DVI are
not available. This is the last of the video display tiers that will support HD resolutions:
Video Display Tier HD-Component.
Not everyone has a high definition display, and some AV7005 owners will be connecting
to a standard definition TV. Even with standard definition displays, there are several
6
Marantz AV7005
Connecting Your AV7005
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