Thanks for the reply.
My component video cables are not super high quality. I think I have some I got from monoprice.com and some I Dyanics ones from Best Buy. Both were buget priced cables.
The cables could be part of the issue. However, the reason I had been dismissing that, is because when I bypass the switch everything works great. I have one component video cable plugged into the TV, a different component video cable plugged into each device (DVD, Wii, Digital tuner), when I couple any device's cable to the TV's cable with a $5 coupler I got from Radio Shack, everything works great. So in that case I am using the exact same cables, the same generation of technology and seeing good results on the TV.
I agree it seems like for some reason my TV does have a narrower range of what "works" coming into the component input. Obviously other people are able to successfully use the exact same video switches successfully.
What I still don't get though, is that three different devices made by completely different companies Yamaha DVD player, Samsung Digital tuner, and Nintendo Wii, all are able to produce component output that my TV has absolutely no problem displaying. Yet, introducing three different video switches from different companies all resulted in the same not working scenario. Why would the video switches all not work (using the exact same cables) when all the devices by themselves do work?
I would be more willing to write off the TV as old with a poor component input if I saw some evidence that new devices didn't work on it, but so far the only device that seem to cause it not to work are component video switches.