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Sseadoubleyou
 
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Default Digital audio connections help?

Hey-


Was wondering if anyone knew anything here about digital audio
connections on audio systems? My system has both optical (fiber optic)

as well as coaxil. I want to connect my DVD player up digitally to the

system. Which digital connection is better, optical or coaxil? I
thought I heard somewhere that coaxil is a 'slower' connection and
optical gets the signal thru faster?


Can anyone confirm this?


Thanks.

P.S. Any difference is sound quality between the two as well?

  #2   Report Post  
Dave Platt
 
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Default

In article . com,
Sseadoubleyou wrote:

Was wondering if anyone knew anything here about digital audio
connections on audio systems? My system has both optical (fiber optic)
as well as coaxil. I want to connect my DVD player up digitally to the
system. Which digital connection is better, optical or coaxil? I
thought I heard somewhere that coaxil is a 'slower' connection and
optical gets the signal thru faster?


Can anyone confirm this?


In one sense, coaxial may be "slower". The electrical signal
propagating through a typical coax will be travelling at somewhere
around 66%-80% of the speed of light in a vacuum, while the signal on
an optical cable may be travelling faster than that (it depends on the
index of refraction of the plastic). Hence, a coax cable may take a
few nanoseconds longer to get the signal to your A/V receiver/preamp
than an optical cable would.

You are *not* going to hear a difference from this effect, even if it
occurs. Period.

There are those who feel that consumer-electronics-type optical links,
using the inexpensive plastic TOSLINK cables (or even the expensive,
boutique TOSLINK cables), may sound somewhat inferior, because the
inexpensive LEDs used to drive them can have a slow rise time, and
that this can lead to timing "jitter" in the receiver, if the optical
receiver circuitry and DACs are poorly designed or implemented. A
good coax-cable driver can have a very fast rise time and would not
suffer from this problem.

I don't know of any actual, reliable, repeatable tests which show that
this is actually an issue.

In some situations, with some equipment, using an optical connection
might produce better sound, because it allows the DVD player and the
A/V preamp to be electrically isolated from one another. A coax cable
connects the two components via its shield, and if they're plugged
into outlets on different electrical circuits this could create a
ground loop and introduce some amount of hum into the sound (and not
just the sound on the digital input, either).

In most situations, however, I believe that the two connections would
result in sound which is indistinguishable - it doesn't matter which
one you use. Use whichever is most convenient, and don't let yourself
be seduced into spending large amounts of money on an expensive
"pro-grade" coax or optical cable with which to make the connection.

If you only need a short cable, I see that Radio Shack currently has a
3-foot "composite video cable, and TOSLINK optical cable" combination
on sale for $2.48 (!!). Catalog nubmer 15-1591. You could buy this,
hook up *both* cables (a composite-video cable is 75 ohms, and is
close to ideal for a digital-audio coax link), and switch your A/V
receiver back and forth to see whether you can hear a difference.

--
Dave Platt AE6EO
Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior
I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will
boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads!
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Arny Krueger
 
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Default

"Dave Platt" wrote in message


If you only need a short cable, I see that Radio Shack
currently has a 3-foot "composite video cable, and
TOSLINK optical cable" combination on sale for $2.48
(!!). Catalog nubmer 15-1591. You could buy this, hook
up *both* cables (a composite-video cable is 75 ohms, and
is close to ideal for a digital-audio coax link), and
switch your A/V receiver back and forth to see whether
you can hear a difference.


I managed to pick up a number of these in both 3 foot and 12
foot lengths. I think the 12 footers were about $7, marked
down from about $40.

Both the toslink and coax parts of the cable are nicely
made, with special mention for the relatively limber toslink
portion.

Since I was interested in just the Toslink portions, I split
the coax parts off and set them aside.

BTW, the application was interfacing two ADA8000s to an
02R96.


  #4   Report Post  
Richard Crowley
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Sseadoubleyou" wrote ...
Was wondering if anyone knew anything here about digital audio
connections on audio systems? My system has both optical (fiber
optic)

as well as coaxil. I want to connect my DVD player up digitally to
the

system. Which digital connection is better, optical or coaxil? I
thought I heard somewhere that coaxil is a 'slower' connection and
optical gets the signal thru faster?
Can anyone confirm this?


No, coaxial is NOT "slower" than optical in any practical way.

You will likely not be able to detect ANY difference between optical
(Toslink) and coaxial (S/PDIF). Coaxial may be the more practical
as you may already have a spare RCA patch cable lying about.

(PS: there is an extra "a" in coaxial)

  #5   Report Post  
Tomi Holger Engdahl
 
Posts: n/a
Default

(Dave Platt) writes:

In article . com,
Sseadoubleyou wrote:

Was wondering if anyone knew anything here about digital audio
connections on audio systems? My system has both optical (fiber optic)
as well as coaxil. I want to connect my DVD player up digitally to the
system. Which digital connection is better, optical or coaxil? I
thought I heard somewhere that coaxil is a 'slower' connection and
optical gets the signal thru faster?


Can anyone confirm this?


In one sense, coaxial may be "slower". The electrical signal
propagating through a typical coax will be travelling at somewhere
around 66%-80% of the speed of light in a vacuum, while the signal on
an optical cable may be travelling faster than that (it depends on the
index of refraction of the plastic).


Basic Principles of Fiber Optics
http://www.corningcablesystems.com/w...pprin?OpenForm

The index of refraction (IOR) is a way of measuring the speed of light
in a material. Light travels fastest in a vacuum, such as outer
space. The actual speed of light in a vacuum is 300 000 kilometers per
second, or 186 000 miles per second.

Notice that the typical value for the cladding of an optical fiber is
1.46. The core value is 1.48. The larger the index of refraction, the
more slowly light travels in that medium.

I think those numbers are for fiber optics made of glass
(the fiber optic types used in telecommunications).
The speed of the signal in optical fiber would be then around
200 000 kilometers per second.

Plastic Optical Fiber, abbreviated POF, typically uses PMMA (acrylic),
a general-purpose resin as the core material, and fluorinated polymers
for the clad material. This should apply to fiber optic cables
used for digital audio.
The simplex cable with PMMA fiber finds application for short distance
analog and digital signal transmission. The step index fiber has a
large area of cross-section and a high numerical aperture,
facilitating easy coupling with transmitting and receiving devices.
Core Refractive Index for such cable would be around 1.492 and
Cladding Refractive Index 1.405 to 1.417 according to
http://www.telenet-systems.com/cableSpecs.php
There could be pastic fiber optic cable with sligtly different
Refractive Index and so slightly different speed. I don't expect
large variations on this.

So for the plasic fiber optic cable the speed would be also in
that around 200 000 kilometers per second. Around 66% of the speed
of light in a vacuum. So certain coaxial cables could carry
the signal at same speed or even faster thn typical fiber optic cable
types. So the fiber optics is not faster than coax.

Hence, a coax cable may take a
few nanoseconds longer to get the signal to your A/V receiver/preamp
than an optical cable would.


So the signal might be slightly faster in one of them.
Generally in commonly used cable type there should not be
any considerable speed difference between coax and fiber!

You are *not* going to hear a difference from this effect, even if it
occurs. Period.


You are absolutely right on this.

There are those who feel that consumer-electronics-type optical links,
using the inexpensive plastic TOSLINK cables (or even the expensive,
boutique TOSLINK cables), may sound somewhat inferior, because the
inexpensive LEDs used to drive them can have a slow rise time, and
that this can lead to timing "jitter" in the receiver, if the optical
receiver circuitry and DACs are poorly designed or implemented. A
good coax-cable driver can have a very fast rise time and would not
suffer from this problem.

I don't know of any actual, reliable, repeatable tests which show that
this is actually an issue.


I can agree on this.

In some situations, with some equipment, using an optical connection
might produce better sound, because it allows the DVD player and the
A/V preamp to be electrically isolated from one another. A coax cable
connects the two components via its shield, and if they're plugged
into outlets on different electrical circuits this could create a
ground loop and introduce some amount of hum into the sound (and not
just the sound on the digital input, either).


I can agree on this also.

In most situations, however, I believe that the two connections would
result in sound which is indistinguishable - it doesn't matter which
one you use. Use whichever is most convenient, and don't let yourself
be seduced into spending large amounts of money on an expensive
"pro-grade" coax or optical cable with which to make the connection.


Absolutely right.

If you only need a short cable, I see that Radio Shack currently has a
3-foot "composite video cable, and TOSLINK optical cable" combination
on sale for $2.48 (!!). Catalog nubmer 15-1591. You could buy this,
hook up *both* cables (a composite-video cable is 75 ohms, and is
close to ideal for a digital-audio coax link), and switch your A/V
receiver back and forth to see whether you can hear a difference.


75 ohm ciaxial cable designed to carry video signals is
the cable type the digital-audio coax link has been designed
to wotk with originally in the standard.

--
Tomi Engdahl (http://www.iki.fi/then/)
Take a look at my electronics web links and documents at
http://www.epanorama.net/


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Stuart Welwood
 
Posts: n/a
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"Sseadoubleyou" wrote in message
ups.com...
Hey-


Was wondering if anyone knew anything here about digital audio
connections on audio systems? My system has both optical (fiber optic)

as well as coaxil. I want to connect my DVD player up digitally to the

system. Which digital connection is better, optical or coaxil? I
thought I heard somewhere that coaxil is a 'slower' connection and
optical gets the signal thru faster?


Can anyone confirm this?


Thanks.

P.S. Any difference is sound quality between the two as well?


One benefit of using an optical connection is that it will not add an
additional electrical ground connection, thereby eliminating a possible
ground loop.

Stuart


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