1-4 of 4 Answers
There are left and right inputs provided for external sound, which can be used for any other device such as a cd player, tape recorder, etc. This can be used for a turntable, but be aware that most phono cartridges require special sound equalization. That is why older stereo equipment had a separate "phono" input, which provided the necessary RIAA equalization, and "auxiliary" inputs for everything else. If your turntable is fairly new, it may provide it's own RIAA equalization, selectable as an option. If it doesn't, you will have to provide the necessary sound correction through another component such as a phono pre-amplifier in between your turntable and the unit's inputs to solve for this.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.A turntable is something that MOST manufacturers do not consider in the 21st century & if it isn't listed in the specs shown in the ad then I'd be willing to bet it does NOT have a dedicated phono input. However, that being said, IF you're willing to sacrifice an input (tape or cd) then you could certainly plug a turntable into that but it WILL likely need a pre-amp to get it to work. I use the external CD player input (with a pre-amp) since all DVD players can play a CD on it anyway.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Yes. You connect a turntable or vcr to the A/V connections.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.with hdmi should be fine
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