At Cable Magic our mission is to provide reliable HDMI cables and other products, fast delivery and a customer user-friendly experience. Cable Magic is Australian owned and operated by professional home theatre installers. To view our extensive range of cables, visit Speaker Cable.
HDMI cables are great. Almost anyone with a personal computer will likely have hours and hours and hours of MP3 music in their Windows Media Player or iTunes library, and maybe a few (or a few dozen) movies we’ve downloaded from Netflix, as well as some home movies we’ve kept for posterity. The problem is that it’s not always enjoyable to listen to that music on low-end computer speakers or watch those movies on your monitor.
So the HDMI cable couldn’t have come along at a better time, allowing us to run media directly from the computer right into the TV, without having to bother burning a bunch of CDs or DVDs to enjoy our music and flicks on something better than our laptop display.
Of course, as with any device first making its way into the homes of consumers, there’s always a learning curve. There are people who bought a VCR back in the 1980’s and who are only now figuring out how to program them. Likewise, a lot of people come home with an HDMI cable and have a tricky time figuring out how to get it to work.
When people break out their first HDMI cable, there can be some difficulties getting it to display correctly. You might get a flickering, scrolling picture, or improper aspect ratio, or any number of other problems. You can plug a coaxial cable into the back of any TV and have it perform just as it would with the next, but television sets these days are built in a variety of types, as are the sources from which you’ll be sending the information. As such, it’s actually not a “one size fits all” undertaking.
It helps if you know your TV’s maximum settings, but if you don’t, here’s what you need to do when your HDMI cable isn’t doing what you bought it to do…
1- Access the menu on your TV, box, or DVD player, and look for the HDMI settings.
2- Honestly, the rest should be self explanatory. Set video out to HDMI, set HDMI audio out to on, etcetera.
3- Set the maximum HDMI resolution that your TV will allow. You’ll know when you pass the maximum resolution because the picture will likely be scrambled or cut off. The settings should be listed something like 576, 720, 1080, etc. Most TV sets these days go up to 1080, but if you don’t know, then you won’t until you check.
And there you go, it’s as simple as that. Like most new entertainment gadgets, gear and gizmos, using an HDMI cable properly is actually quite a bit simpler than it seems to be at first, it’s just a matter of learning how it works.
Now, if you’re still having troubles after adjusting all the settings properly, then the trouble is most likely a defective product. Either your TV can’t accept HDMI for some reason, there’s an issue with your source’s HDMI port, or the cable itself is damaged. Try changing the cable out to see if that’s the problem, and then simply return the defective cable.
- Related Videos
- Related Articles
- Ask / Related Q&A




Things to Consider When Planning for a Hotel Reservation
By: Michael Adam | 07/12/2009In planning a hotel reservation it is best that you know the things to consider before choosing a venue for your tips. It could help you a lot in achieving a perfect and successful vacation.
Making Your Online Webinar a Success
By: Tom Cruz | 01/12/2009When it comes to having an online webinar, you are definitely looking to make it a success. You have a specific purpose for your webinar, therefore, to achieve that purpose you must take the necessary steps to ensure that it is interesting, attention grabbing, and smooth running. In this article, we will discuss some of the ways you can make sure your online webinar is a smashing success.
How Can Webinar Software Help Your Business?
By: Tom Cruz | 01/12/2009Gone are the days where seminars have to be held in conference rooms of a hotel. Gone are the days when only certain people within a local vicinity can attend. Now, with webinar software, you can reach millions at once, all across the world. If you live in Washington state and you have potential attendees in New York, you have no problems in displaying your message throughout the country thanks to webinar software.
Make Your Webinar a Success
By: Tom Cruz | 01/12/2009If you are intending to have a webinar any time soon, you want to make sure that it is a great success. When your webinar is a success, you have a great chance of generating interested sales leads, which then leads to an increase in your sales. This is what you ultimately want right? An increase in sales? Of course it is, therefore, in this article we will show you some tips to ensure that you have a successful webinar.
What is Dynamic Contrast Ratio?
By: Joe Watson | 30/11/2009Those of us that were children back in the dark ages of black and white television (or even colour cathode ray sets) might remember fiddling with the contrast knob on the front of the television to completely grey out the actors at one end of the knob’s reach, and turn them into eyeball-straining black and white monsters at the other end. If you remember that, then you’ve been learning about contrast ratio since you were knee high to a grasshopper!
How a speaker cable affects sound quality
By: Shane Seymour | 30/11/2009If you’re outfitting your home theater, then most likely, you’ve spent a great deal of care selecting the speakers to go with it. You want your surround sound to be just as crisp and clear as the image on your new hi def television set, so you’ve gone out of your way to get the best quality speakers and arrange them perfectly to get the full surround sound experience.
Dvico 6600 Series PVR hits Aussie shores with a bang!
By: Myles Abbott | 30/11/2009The brand new Dvico 6600 series of Personal Video Recorders landed in Australia earlier this month. So far, the response has been outstanding. Having sold dozens of players already, this unit is fast becoming our most successful product launch yet.
DVD questions and answers
By: moviedvdfaq | 25/11/2009Any honest horror movies lately released on DVD? I love the scary ones, and was wondering what be out to buy recently? 1408 based on a Stephen King novel fo like peas in a pod name thriller / horror freaked me out heaps new horror movies that i conjecture you should see are: mirrors dead silence hillside...
How a speaker cable affects sound quality
By: Shane Seymour | 30/11/2009 | Video ConferencingIf you’re outfitting your home theater, then most likely, you’ve spent a great deal of care selecting the speakers to go with it. You want your surround sound to be just as crisp and clear as the image on your new hi def television set, so you’ve gone out of your way to get the best quality speakers and arrange them perfectly to get the full surround sound experience.
Troubleshooting HDMI cables
By: Shane Seymour | 16/11/2009 | Video ConferencingHDMI cables are great. Almost anyone with a personal computer will likely have hours and hours and hours of MP3 music in their Windows Media Player or iTunes library, and maybe a few (or a few dozen) movies we’ve downloaded from Netflix, as well as some home movies we’ve kept for posterity. The problem is that it’s not always enjoyable to listen to that music on low-end computer speakers or watch those movies on your monitor.
What makes a Monster cable so great?
By: Shane Seymour | 02/11/2009 | Video ConferencingThe reason Monster Cables are called Monster Cables is their size. Simply put, they come in thicker gauges than most audio cables. There’s a misconception floating around that the wider gauge of a Monster cable actually improves on sound quality, or otherwise offers better performance… that’s not exactly why they’re made so thick… Sound quality really has nothing to do with how thick a cable is or what it’s made of or anything like that.
What makes for the best HDMI cables?
By: Shane Seymour | 14/09/2009 | Video ConferencingA question that gets asked quite often when you’re dealing in HDMI cables: What makes this or that HDMI cable better than the next? Well, the truth is that it doesn’t really matter what HDMI cable you’re using. If it works, it works, and no matter what a sales clerk looking for a big commission might tell you, picture quality isn’t really affected at all by using one brand or another, or by grabbing the expensive gold plated cable, or, really, by much at all.