<< What sound card were you using?
It's all in the sound card. If you have a decent quality card such as the TB santa cruz, audigy, phillips AE, or GTXP, the sound will be good.
The choices all involve a 1/8-rca or rca-rca interconnect. Unless.. you buy a 5.1 integrated receiver and then use a digital out on the sound card to the receiver, and then plug the speakers to the receiver.
Either way with the quality sound card, your audio shouldn't lack.
If you would like to use 2 bookshelf speakers you may purchase a stereo integrated receiver that plugs to the sound card. OR you may use the sound card as the (preamplifier processor) and connect a separate power amplifier to the sound card (What I recommend).
If you already have a 5.1 integrated receiver, then just use a digital coaxial cable or optical from the sound card to the receiver. This might be the easiest and most affordable solution.
If you already have the speakers and sound card, then you can buy an amp instead of a receiver. Companies such as Parasound, Rotel, Kenwood or ATI make decent amplifiers. 5 channel amps don't come cheap though... >>
Thanks for the quick response! Here's the setup I envision:
Acoustic Research HC1 or Acoustic Research HC6
McIntosh Amplifier
Sony Trinitron Television with RCA input
I have a laptop with not so good sound. It's not 5.1 compatible, and it does not have digital out. When I use it with my Onkyo Receiver via the 1/8 to RCAs, I set it to BYPASS so I only hear the front two bookshelf speakers. It still doesn't sound good however🙁
Which Power Amplifier do you recommend? Do you think I should get an Extigy (external SoundBlaster Audigy) then get a power amplifier and receiver? I want to have a mini home theatre system that I can also hook my laptop to for when I want to listen to my MP3s🙂
Sorry for the jumbled post, but I really appreciate the help!🙂