PC to a HT kit

Soldato
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24 Sep 2005
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Who'd have thought that connecting a PC to a 5.1 HT system by optical WOULDN'T transmit 5.1!!?? :eek:

Could some kind fellow tell me how I can get 5.1 from everything please? :)

Thanks.
 
7.1 so yes :)

Got 2 actually. I was using an XtremeMusic but as i've just got this HT system and the Creative card doesn't have optical means i've switched to the onboard Realtek HD card which has an optical connection.
 
I have an Xtreme Music as well. It does have SPDIF out, but as it was released back in day before optical ports were added directly onto the card, the only way to make use of it, is to have either an I/O front panel bay, or an I/O module. The module has optical and coaxial in and out, and connects to the flexi-jack.

Even if you have one of these I/O devices, you would still need the Dolby/DTS software pack from Creative's US store. The Titanium upwards comes with it included.

Getting Dolby/DTS from a DVD, or a media files with Dolby/DTS tracks, you would not need real time 5.1 encoding, as the 5.1 track is passed on to the external decoder by the software. Most PC games though, do not have Dolby/DTS. Without Dolby/DTS, SPDIF is only stereo. Dolby/DTS real time 5.1 encoding, takes the 5.1 sound and encodes it, then it's passed on to the external decoder.

Some motherboards do have real time Dolby/DTS encoding, but it's usually the higher end boards. If your home theatre kit has Dolby Prologic, then it could be you enabled that. Prologic takes stereo and upmixes it to 5.1. There is an equivalent for 7.1. You will get sound from all speakers, but it's not true 5.1/7.1.
 
Yeah i've figured out how to switch it to Dolby Pro Logic... and you're right.. I remember reading about the I/O thing.

Anyway... still experimenting but i think most stuff is transmitting in 5.1. I hate buying new stuff cos I don't know how to use it :D

http://www.pioneer.eu/uk/products/42/98/405/VSX-421/index.html

This is what i'm using... it's a lot more difficult to use than the Onkyo R380 I had previously.
 
If you have a GFX card with an audio chip, such as Radeon 5 or 6 series card, you could use that to pass on multi channel PCM to your AVR. No need for any real time Dolby/DTS encoding that SPDIF needs, when gaming.
 
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