Looking for a Wireless SPDIF device. Does it exist?

Googer

Lifer
Nov 11, 2004
12,576
7
81
I am looking for a wireless SPDIF device. I want to connect a toslink or spdif coax device to a transmitter and have a wireless receiver in another room convret the RF signal back to spdif coax and/or toslink. does such a device exist? Looking for something that can preferably support 5.1, 24bit 192khz.


If not, perhaps there is a way to convert SPDIF coax/toslink to hdmi then use a wireless hdmi box? Then convert HDMI to spdif at the receiving end.
 

Rubycon

Madame President
Aug 10, 2005
17,768
485
126
I am looking for a wireless SPDIF device. I want to connect a toslink or spdif coax device to a transmitter and have a wireless receiver in another room convret the RF signal back to spdif coax and/or toslink. does such a device exist? Looking for something that can preferably support 5.1, 24bit 192khz.


If not, perhaps there is a way to convert SPDIF coax/toslink to hdmi then use a wireless hdmi box? Then convert HDMI to spdif at the receiving end.

It may be possible to do this via wifi with HDMI to Ethernet adapters.
 

mmntech

Lifer
Sep 20, 2007
17,501
12
0
AFAIK, you can't do that. Wireless HDMI would have done it but the tech has long since become vapourware.
 

Googer

Lifer
Nov 11, 2004
12,576
7
81
It may be possible to do this via wifi with HDMI to Ethernet adapters.

My Dac does not have HDMI. I am looking to avoid that route, because it it costly.

I did find this, but it's $100 and only supports 48khz PCM

http://www.emu.com/support/files/storage/e-mu-pipeline-user-guide.pdf
http://www.emu.com/products/product.asp?category=902&subcategory=903&product=18609

And this unknown device is friggin $200!
http://cryo-parts.com/wddc.html

However, I found a forum post stating you can use an analog wireless video adapter for SPDIF and that is much cheaper. The Thomson mentioned does not appear to be available. Anyone know where I Can find something similar?
http://www.hydrogenaudio.org/forums/lofiversion/index.php/t40839.html

I'm still open to other alternatives and suggestions.
 
Last edited:

moonboy403

Golden Member
Aug 18, 2004
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0
76
There are plenty of options, such as Apple Airport Express/Squeezebox/Logitech Transporter, to transmit SPDIF wireless for two channel audio.
 

Modelworks

Lifer
Feb 22, 2007
16,240
7
76
All you need is a transmitter and receiver that has enough bandwidth to send any signal HDMI included, there is nothing special involved . Analog video transmitters that do composite are a good choice for spdif , they have enough bandwidth and are pretty cheap to boot. You don't need a special version, just one that handles analog video. Connect the coax spdif to the transmitters composite input and enjoy.
 

sunbreak

Junior Member
Aug 24, 2013
1
0
0
I accomplished this some time ago on with an old X10 video sender like the one shown in the links below.

http://compare.ebay.com/like/221241026927

The trick is to use the video port for the SPDIF composite connection and not the stereo audio ports. So essentially you are turning the video sender in to a digital audio sender. I successfully established full DTS and Dolby surround sound without issue. I believe the video sender from X10 used a analog to digitial encoder that employed enough bandwidth to preserve the integrity out the other end.

All in all though it worked great. I still have two sets of these and although I'm not using them I keep them around for that great versatility of plugging anything in and digitizing it, sending it and boom ... out the other end ... neat!
 

razel

Platinum Member
May 14, 2002
2,337
93
101
IIRC... SPDIF/Coax doesn't support 5.1, 24bit 192khz. Only 2 channel up to 192khz PCM. If officially isn't standardized for it. Doesn't mean that it'll stop you. :) But realistically it supports multichannel 5.1, 7.1 through DD+, DTS, etc... the lossy compressed formats.