Connecting old sky box to Panasonic smart tv
Discussion
I’ve just bought a Panasonic TX-55FX550B. I was about to set things up when I discovered my Sky digibox (Model no DS430N) probably 12 plus years old connect to my current tv via a 20 prong male scart. Unfortunately Panasonic have stopped putting in a scart socket so I’m a bit stumped. The new tv does have some HDMI slots. My questions are.
Can I buy a new box to replace my existing one with connections that will match my tv or are there 20 prong male scart - hdmi connectors I can buy and if so where and how is the part described. Thank you in advance for any advice.
Can I buy a new box to replace my existing one with connections that will match my tv or are there 20 prong male scart - hdmi connectors I can buy and if so where and how is the part described. Thank you in advance for any advice.
The 3 phono sockets on the back will accept the signal from the existing box. A "scart to 3x phono" cable will do it.
There's bound to be better sky boxes with an hdmi out, but I don't know those.
ETA - I've tried scart-hdmi adapters before for a similar job, and not been all that impressed, so wait for a recommendation on that front.
Also - if you're paying a subscription to Sky, phone them and ask what they can offer in the way of a shiny new box.
There's bound to be better sky boxes with an hdmi out, but I don't know those.
ETA - I've tried scart-hdmi adapters before for a similar job, and not been all that impressed, so wait for a recommendation on that front.
Also - if you're paying a subscription to Sky, phone them and ask what they can offer in the way of a shiny new box.
Edited by shtu on Wednesday 29th May 22:20
Thank you for your helpful replies. I ended up going to a local tv/video repair shop in my local town and discovered I was not alone in having this problem. They supplied a scart to 3 phono lead (as Shtu suggested) for £9 and the tv sprang to life. Thank God these little repair shops still exist.
Borghetto said:
Thank you for your helpful replies. I ended up going to a local tv/video repair shop in my local town and discovered I was not alone in having this problem. They supplied a scart to 3 phono lead (as Shtu suggested) for £9 and the tv sprang to life. Thank God these little repair shops still exist.
I'm curious why you didn't go for an HD box, you've just got a shiny new TV but only an SD source to feed it.Forums | Home Cinema & Hi-Fi | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff



