- Oct 7, 2000
- 11,554
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Originally posted by: MustangSVT
ah thanx
thought they looked the same
what does ayup stand for?
Originally posted by: jaeger66
RCA is a type of connection, not a type of cable. What's inside can be anything. You cannot use an RCA jack audio cable to transmit a SPDIF stream.
Originally posted by: conjur
S/PDIF
S/PDIF (Sony/Philips Digital Interface) is a standard audio transfer file format. It is usually found on digital audio equipment such as a DAT machine or audio processing device. It allows the transfer of audio from one file to another without the conversion to and from an analog format, which could degrade the signal quality.
The most common connector used with an S/PDIF interface is the RCA connector, the same one used for consumer audio products. An optical connector is also sometimes used.
Originally posted by: jaeger66
Originally posted by: conjur
S/PDIF
S/PDIF (Sony/Philips Digital Interface) is a standard audio transfer file format. It is usually found on digital audio equipment such as a DAT machine or audio processing device. It allows the transfer of audio from one file to another without the conversion to and from an analog format, which could degrade the signal quality.
The most common connector used with an S/PDIF interface is the RCA connector, the same one used for consumer audio products. An optical connector is also sometimes used.
Argh, the connector has nothing to do with it. You need a coaxial cable, which audio cables are NOT. It may or may not be fitted with an RCA termination. An RCA tipped video cable will probably work as long as it's not completely cheapo.
Originally posted by: conjur
uh...well...the one I'm using is about a $5 cable from WalMart. Works fine. Run into the coaxial digital in on my Yamaha RX-V795. Granted, it's a video cable (75ohm).
Originally posted by: jaeger66
Originally posted by: conjur
uh...well...the one I'm using is about a $5 cable from WalMart. Works fine. Run into the coaxial digital in on my Yamaha RX-V795. Granted, it's a video cable (75ohm).
Well, there you go. The cheapest bargain basement cables are usually coax and they just put lots of labels on them. But to be sure I'd just get the cheapest video cable that actually has a name brand. I think AR has one for like $10. Of course if you're into signal purity for a higher-end setup you should get something a little better.
Originally posted by: conjur
Well, imo, digital is digital. Either the bits get there or they don't.
Originally posted by: jaeger66
Originally posted by: conjur
Well, imo, digital is digital. Either the bits get there or they don't.
That's not true. Poor or overly long cabling can introduce jitter, which is a bad thing. To put it as simply as I can-it's not a matter of if they get there, but when.
Originally posted by: jaeger66
Originally posted by: conjur
uh...well...the one I'm using is about a $5 cable from WalMart. Works fine. Run into the coaxial digital in on my Yamaha RX-V795. Granted, it's a video cable (75ohm).
Well, there you go. The cheapest bargain basement cables are usually coax and they just put lots of labels on them. But to be sure I'd just get the cheapest video cable that actually has a name brand. I think AR has one for like $10. Of course if you're into signal purity for a higher-end setup you should get something a little better.
Originally posted by: thomsbrain
yeah, those 1's and 0's sound way better through a better cable.![]()
Originally posted by: jaeger66
Originally posted by: conjur
Well, imo, digital is digital. Either the bits get there or they don't.
That's not true. Poor or overly long cabling can introduce jitter, which is a bad thing. To put it as simply as I can-it's not a matter of if they get there, but when.
Originally posted by: Goosemaster
Actually, although they are many times praised for their anti-jitter properties, optical cables are usually MORe suceptible to jitter
Originally posted by: Goosemaster
75 0hm is all you need...even for HDTV![]()