Yeah, read in my manual that there was a difference between the analog stereo using the red/white plugs to get the 5.1 surround versus using the coax digital or optical audio to get it. But, how exactly is DD really different???
Unpossible.jbcheshire said:analog stereo using the red/white plugs to get the 5.1 surround
My fault here, I wasn't thinking about the separate analog per-channel connections (I have never used those). In that case, if you have one cable going from the DVD player to the A/V receiver for each of: left front, right front, center front, left rear, right rear, subwoofer; then your DVD player is decoding the Dolby Digital 5.1 signal and putting out the separate analog signal for each speaker, to be amplified by your A/V receiver. That is basically the same thing as using a single digital connection. However, it does introduce more/longer analog paths that could suffer from interference, but that wouldn't likely cause any problems.jbcheshire said:I have connections from my DVD player into my A/V receiver for each speaker in my surround sound system.
I don't know of a specific name for it since I've seen it called many things. I suggest going to a good electronics/AV/Home Theater store's web site and do a search for the term "optical" since that's probably the term most likely to appear in the product description.jbcheshire said:Tux,
How about that coax-optical adapter you mentioned. Does it have a specific name I should look for at radio shack?
No the 508 has analog stereo outputs. As I said earlier 90% of analog TV is only stereo. HD is often 5.1jbcheshire said:Unfortunately the 508 only has a TOSLink output, like my tv. So, i have to choose which one i want sound from for the a/v receiver to distribute...