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News: Come see us February 11, 8-5 at the Head-Fi meet at the Burlingame Double Tree Hotel, Burlingame, CA. We'll be bringing lots of headphones and amps, and our prototype tube DAC used with our music server and the latest version of Amarra.

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Author Topic: PC card for S/PDIF output  (Read 1232 times)
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JC
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« on: June 13, 2010, 06:36:05 PM »

I have an older PC that I would like to use as a music server, but unfortunately it has no S/PDIF output from its mainboard's integrated sound section, at least not one I can find on the board anywhere.  Since I already have a DAC I would like to use instead of the rather noisy setup on the board, it sure would be nice to find a simple PCI card with a coaxial output for S/PDIF.  I really have no particular need at the present for more than 2 channels or anything designed to support some ultra-high end gaming format; just simple stereo.

Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated, as my own searches have lead to either super-sophisticated or too cheap to work, nothing in between.

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Jim C.
JC
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« Reply #1 on: June 27, 2010, 06:04:48 PM »

LMAO!  "When it gets to 100, sell!"

How will I ever wade through all these responses!  Well, at least I think I can make a few assumptions to test, based on this:

1)   I am missing something obvious, like "Everyone knows that the XYZ
      Mutilator LS is the only card to use!"

2)   No one else in the history of personal computers has ever wanted a simple
      S/PDIF card without all of the wonderful bells and whistles that the PC Cartel
      says are mandatory.

3)   Others here have had pretty much the same luck I have.
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Jim C.
mrarroyo
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« Reply #2 on: June 27, 2010, 11:56:27 PM »

If you can find an older Chaintech AV710 it will provide you w/ optical out which will electrically de-couple the PC from the DAC. Good luck.
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JC
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« Reply #3 on: June 28, 2010, 12:22:34 AM »

Thanks, I'll definitely look into that.  It would mean putting an optical receiver on to my old DAC, but that seems easy enough, and the electrical isolation would be a nice thing to experiment with.

Truth be told, I may have been able to obtain an OEM accessory from the mainboard manufacturer that would have plugged right in and given me both flavors of S/PDIF out.  Six years ago, when it was new.  But, I wasn't aware of that until recently when I decided it should spend its retirement as a music server, and of course the OEM no longer has ever heard of such a thing.

Six years is truly an eternity, in PC years!
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Jim C.
Tubejack
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« Reply #4 on: June 28, 2010, 03:36:35 AM »


http://www.enjoythemusic.com/magazine/equipment/0210/m2tech_hiface_usb.htm

http://www.m2tech.biz/

Disclaimer - I have no affiliation with M2Tech, except as a satisfied user.
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JC
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« Reply #5 on: June 28, 2010, 03:59:21 AM »

Yes it has, and I have looked at several such converters; not this particular set, though, so I will most definitely study this more later, and thanks for posting this.

I guess I kind of instinctively have been looking for a way to avoid another digital conversion, on the theory that more conversions could mean more chances for errors to be introduced, although I have no particular basis for that theory.  Still, I like my old DAC and I like the AIFF files I have stored from CD and if I really want to hear the two together this may indeed be the best way to go about it.

In researching this, I have most definitely come to the conclusion that if I were designing a DAC, a USB input would definitely figure prominently into the design goals.  Pity that the digital world can never seem to settle on one all-purpose I-O/transmission format.

Thanks again!
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Jim C.
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