What is the superior audio connection for home theater: Optical (toslink) or Coaxial Digital? - superior home inspections
Who among us has excellent sound quality? There are also major disadvantages to the other? Thank you!
PS: Please do not make HDMI b / c my DVD player has no port for example.
Monday, January 18, 2010
Superior Home Inspections What Is The Superior Audio Connection For Home Theater: Optical (toslink) Or Coaxial Digital?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
5 comments:
Optical is better, can not handle DGITAL coax more thn 5.1 sound. TER as optics and can be up to the height of the sign site, which is 7.1 today. Optics can change if the change in the high-tech, coaxial die soon
After working with high-quality cables, so that after digital coaxial, in my opinion, give a better sound much warmer and clearer.
I have connected a NextGen AGDL cash with Kimber (WBT 0110) using a coaxial digital Rega Apollo CD player, and it just sounds incredible.
I also have a Kimber D-60 (coaxial) is again a Pioneer DVD player and connected by the brachial Monster Cable M1000 optics, as well as before.
First, the coaxial cable may seem a bit strong, but give him time to break right, and you will not be disappointed.
Purists may say, coaxial digital, and it does not convert on a pass to DAC digital / analog means less signal loss over Toslink. The digital sound is a marketing ploy, the digital audio signal once it goes speakers in the back to analog (no work involved analog signal converted)
As to what is higher, which I think a normal Joe can see a difference in their sound in a blind test on.
Con = Toslink connector is easily broken, if u want to have to move around or play with your HT.
A standard RCA (thick cable), so long as the impedance of 75 ohms is a real function subwoofer digital coaxial cable.
Winner = Digital Coax, ha ha j k / use what is useful, I say!
Optical, without signal loss.
From a rational perspective, it is doubtful that you can hear a difference between the 2. The biggest advantage of the digital envelope approach is, if you have any type of RF interference in the vicinity of your system. The operation has no effect on the optical properties, but it is digital.
weeder
Post a Comment