| AV CABLE: | Audio Video cable |
|---|---|
| Gender: | Male-Male |
| Brand Name: | HK |
| Outer Diameter: | 2.8mm |
| Connector Color: | Gold |
| Application: | DVD Player |
| Type: | Coaxial |
| Shielding: | Non-Shielded |
| Place of Origin: | Guangdong China |
| Color: | Black |
| Model Number: | AAA |
| Connector Type: | RCA |
| Packing: | Polybag |
| Fob Price: | US$0.3-2HONGKONG/SHENZHEN |
|---|---|
| Port: | HONGKONG/SHENZHEN |
| Payment Terms: | T/T,Western Union |
| Minimum Order Quantity: | 300 Piece/Pieces |
| Supply Ability: | 4000 Piece/Pieces per Day |
| Package: | TRANSPARENT POLY BAGS BOX 46X30X30CM |
| Delivery Time: | 7 days |
1.RCA CABLE
2.RCA AUDIO CABLE
3.RCA VIDEO CABLE
4.RCA TO CABLE BEST RCA CABLE
5.DC 3.5 TO RCA CABLE VGA TO RCA CABLE
Specifications:
1)3RCA composite Video+Audio cable.
2)Get composite RCA video and qudio connectors all in one cable.
3)Gold-plated composite RCA Video and Audio cable is specifically designed to providesharp and clear video and sound for your home theatre system.
4)All cable of copper wire.
5)You can connect video equipment with composite and audio output jacks to televisions and projestors with composite video and audio input jacks.
6)The 24K Gold-Plated heavy duty RCA male connectors on each end provide excellent strain rellef to keep your cable intact.
7)An ultra flexible PVC jacket and color coded connectors help to simplify installation.
8)Heavy duty PVC jacket provides maximum protection to the cable while minimizing signal loses and statics.
9)Unparalleted quality and Top-Line performance for home theater ayudio equipment.
10)AV cable Type:Audio/Video cable
11)Connectivity:3RCA TO 3RCA cable,RCA TO RCA cable,DC TO 2RCA cable,DC TO 3RCA cable all are in our production line.
AV cables also produce the following products:RCA TO SCART cable,RCA audio cable,RCA video cable,RCA cable to video cable,RCA component cable,RCA audio video cable,BNC cable,Composite RCA cable,Coaxial RCA cable.
RCA Corporation, founded as Radio Corporation of America, was an
electronics company in existence from 1919 to 1986. Currently,
the RCA trademark is owned by the French conglomerate Thomson SA
through RCA Trademark Management S.A., a company owned by
Thomson. The trademark is used by Sony Music Entertainment and
Thomson SA, which licenses the name to other companies like
Audiovox and TCL Corporation for products descended from that
common ancestor.
Organization by General Electric
On August 4, 1914, the United Kingdom and France declared war on
Germany and Austria-Hungary, starting World War I. Radio traffic
across the Atlantic Ocean increased dramatically after the
Germans cut Allied cable telegraphs.
During the war, the United States Navy suppressed patents owned
by the major companies involved with radio manufacture in the
United States to facilitate the war effort. All production of
radio equipment was allocated for the Army and Navy. The Navy
sought to maintain a government monopoly of wireless radio;
however, the wartime command system over radio was to eventually
end by the tabling of the maintenance of government control by
the U.S. Congress in 1918. The rejection of the government
monopoly did not prevent the Navy from creating a national radio
system. On April 8, 1919, U.S. Navy Captain Stanford C. Hooper
and Admiral W. H. G. Bullard met with General Electric Company
executives to ask that they not sell their Alexanderson
alternators to the British-owned Marconi Company and its
subsidiary Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America. The
premise of the Navy's proposal was that if GE created an
American owned radio company, then the Navy would secure a
commercial monopoly of long-distance radio communication. This
marked the beginning of negotiations by which GE would buy
American Marconi and organize what would become the Radio
Corporation of America.
RCA was one of the eight major computer companies (along with
IBM, Burroughs, Control Data Corporation, General Electric,
Honeywell, NCR and UNIVAC) through most of the 1960s. RCA
marketed the Spectra 70 Series (70/15, 70/25, 70/35, 70/45,
70/46, 70/55, 70/60, 70/61) that were compatible with IBMs 360
series and the RCA Series (RCA 2, 3, 6, 7) competing against the
IBM 370. These systems all ran RCAs real memory operating
systems, DOS and TDOS. RCAs Virtual Memory Systems, the
Spectra 70/46 and 70/61 and the RCA 3 and 7 could also run their
Virtual Memory Operating System, VMOS. VMOS was originally named
TSOS (Time Sharing Operating System), but was renamed in order
to expand the system beyond the time sharing market. In fact RCA
was credited with coining the term Virtual Memory. TSOS was the
first mainframe, demand paging, virtual memory operating system
on the market. The English Electric System 4 range, the 4-10, 4
-30, 4-50,4-70 and the time-sharing 4-75 computers were
essentially RCA Spectra 70 clones of the IBM System /360 and 370
range. RCA abandoned computers in 1971. In January 1972, Sperry
officially took over the RCA base.
RCA Graphic Services Division (GSD) was a pioneer in
computerized typesetting, marketing the Rudolph Hell Digiset as
the VideoComp 800 with a Spectra computer running the FileComp
composition system. The system would also typeset from tapes
composed on a mainframe using the RCA Page-1 composition system.
When RCA left the computer field, support of the VideoComp was
taken over by Information International Inc. (known in the
typesetting industry as Triple-I).
RCA was a major proponent of the eight-track tape cartridge,
which it launched in 1965. The eight-track cartridge initially
had a huge and profitable impact on the consumer marketplace.
However, sales of the 8-track tape format peaked early on as
consumers increasingly favored the compact cassette tape format
developed by competitor Philips.
US$0.31 - 0.52 / Piece
Min. order: 1 Piece
Buy NowUS$100.00 - 102.06 / Lot
20 Pieces / Lot
Min. order: 1 Lot
Buy NowUS$100.00 - 102.06 / Lot
20 Pieces / Lot
Min. order: 1 Lot
Buy NowUS$100.00 - 102.06 / Lot
20 Pieces / Lot
Min. order: 1 Lot
Buy NowUS$100.00 - 102.06 / Lot
20 Pieces / Lot
Min. order: 1 Lot
Buy Now