Told me to try a SKART to 3 RCA cable and I'd be set, reworked the cables so the DVD player would work again, and off he went - before explaining how the darn thing SHOULD be wired once I have the cables (even though I asked him twice)
I have my SKART cable, but can't seem to tune in Sky at all - not even the B&W and no sound version.
It's SCART - Syndicat des Constructeurs d'Appareils Radiorécepteurs et Téléviseurs.
What he was telling you to do is use a SCART-to-RCA cable to connect the individual video signals to the inputs on your TV, which will bypass the PAL vs. NTSC encoding issues.
The problem you might have is that there are two different types of component video connections. One, commonly referred to as RGB, provides separate red, green, and blue video signals along three separate wires, and this is the component video output you have at a SCART socket. The other component video system which is more widespread on U.S. TV sets still uses three separate connections but with luminance plus two color-difference signals, often marked on the jacks as Y/Cr/Cb or Y/Pr/Pb (U.K. sets have increasingly provided this option in recent years too). The two systems are incompatible.
So if the satellite receiver has only a SCART socket for video outputs, and your TV won't accept composite PAL video, it will need individual RGB inputs to work with a SCART-to-RCA cable.
You still need to connect the audio portion separately. Many Sky boxes have separate L/R RCA jacks for audio output which you can link directly to matching RCA audio inputs on the TV, but if the SCART sockets are the only option provided, you'll need an adapter cable which not only provides the component video feeds but also two more RCA connections for the audio.
Can you list the sockets which are provided on the back of the units, or better yet a detailed photograph?
SkyGuy also told me that most cheap DVD players will play both NTSC and PAL, as everyone here likes to buy the less expensive US DVDs....is this true, or do I need to find a multi region player (and where).
There are two separate issues: There is NTSC vs. PAL and the related scanning systems, and there is region coding. Generally, the two will coincide since the DVDs are sold for the appropriate market, but technically they are separate issues, so as well as supporting both video formats the player will need to be multi-region ("region free").