Author Topic: S/pdif Interface Connector  (Read 2562 times)

Offline Oprime

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 303
    • http://Moogleforest.net
S/pdif Interface Connector
« on: February 09, 2007, 01:45:01 PM »
Sup guys. I wanna connect my Z-5500 speakers via its Optical input. I know most motherboards and Sound cards have S/PDIF pins that a connector can be attached to but, I can't find a connector that has an optical S/PDIF output interface.

Anybody know where I can get one that will connect to the sound card pins?
« Last Edit: February 09, 2007, 01:51:51 PM by Oprime »
CPU: AMD Phenom II 940BE
RAM: Patriot Viper 4GB (2GB x2) DDR2 1066Mhz
Motherboard: MSI K9A2 Platinum
Case: Thermaltake Armor Plus+
Power Supply: Themermatake ToughPower 1200Watt PSU
Hard Drive: Fujitsu 15k SAS SCSI 74GB/148GB Raid 0 @ 189MBps
Moniter: LG Flatron 20.1in Widescreen LCD 8ms 1400:1 Contrast ratio w/ F engine
GFX Card: 4 ATI Radeon 4870 1GB GDDR5 CrossFireX
DVD Burners: 2x SONY DVD-RW
Speakers[/b] Logitech Z-5500 505Watt 5.1 Surround
CPU Heatsink[/b]ZeroTerm NV120
OS[/b]Windows Vista Home Premium x64
:P I'm a Hardware freak ><

Offline BlackBox

  • Administrator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3093
S/pdif Interface Connector
« Reply #1 on: February 09, 2007, 02:00:25 PM »
Well, the pins are for an electrical S/PDIF connection... you might able to able to get some sort of electrical -> optical hookup. (Usually it's something as simple as a bright LED connected to a jack).

Does the sound card have an optical output? (They look different from most jacks. It looks kinda like the hole that speaker leads would be connected to (by stripping the wires and inserting))

Many stereo system components and DVD players have these connectors. Your soundcard might not.

However, the pinout for the SPDIF header is pretty widely understood, so it should be pretty easy to connect something to it (assuming your speakers can take a coaxial input for SPDIF).

It's possible that your soundcard might have a coax output built in already. Sometimes, it just routes the SPDIF through the regular analog jacks (as is the case with my sound card), you have to turn on an option in the volume settings to enable digital output.

But again, neither of these are optical. You will need to connect the speakers through coax / RCA to get SPDIF input unless you can somehow connect an optical transmitter to the SPDIF output pins.
« Last Edit: February 09, 2007, 02:02:43 PM by op2hacker »

Offline Oprime

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 303
    • http://Moogleforest.net
S/pdif Interface Connector
« Reply #2 on: February 09, 2007, 02:36:50 PM »
My speakers can take both coax and optical connections Logitech Z-5500. I have a coax interface cable that will connect to the onboard pins. Reason why I'm looking for a optical interface cable/board would be cuz I'm building a Media room. xD in total the project is most likely going to cost me more or less $8,000. Optical connections don't get the interference that copper based cords get.

If there is an interface I can simply connect to the onboard S/PDIF pins it'll keep me from spending $200+ for a card that has an optical out. If there is no easy way out of spending money on a card that has one that's ok but, dang why are hi-end sound cards so expensive when they are so weak and use old tech >.>;;.
 
CPU: AMD Phenom II 940BE
RAM: Patriot Viper 4GB (2GB x2) DDR2 1066Mhz
Motherboard: MSI K9A2 Platinum
Case: Thermaltake Armor Plus+
Power Supply: Themermatake ToughPower 1200Watt PSU
Hard Drive: Fujitsu 15k SAS SCSI 74GB/148GB Raid 0 @ 189MBps
Moniter: LG Flatron 20.1in Widescreen LCD 8ms 1400:1 Contrast ratio w/ F engine
GFX Card: 4 ATI Radeon 4870 1GB GDDR5 CrossFireX
DVD Burners: 2x SONY DVD-RW
Speakers[/b] Logitech Z-5500 505Watt 5.1 Surround
CPU Heatsink[/b]ZeroTerm NV120
OS[/b]Windows Vista Home Premium x64
:P I'm a Hardware freak ><

Offline BlackBox

  • Administrator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3093
S/pdif Interface Connector
« Reply #3 on: February 09, 2007, 02:45:39 PM »
yeah, electrical interference is a problem if you have to run long cables.

However, I think long fiberoptic TOSLINK cables are pretty expensive if you need them.

As for connecting TOSLINK (optical) to the SPDIF pins, you need what they seem to call a "TTL -> TOSLINK" adaptor (it takes the electrical signal and converts it to an optical signal)

(TOSLINK are the square connectors with the hole, that looks like the speaker wire connection)

This site seems to have plans to build one:
http://www.epanorama.net/documents/audio/spdif.html

Hope that can point you in the right direction -- it seems you might be able to do something as simple as connecting an LED to the pins.

Offline Galactic

  • Administrator
  • Full Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 144
    • http://www.konker.net
S/pdif Interface Connector
« Reply #4 on: February 09, 2007, 10:38:16 PM »
A lot of sound cards today have optical ports on it. My $40 external USB sound card has them, so it isn't an expensive technology. Just recently I worked on a computer with an optical port on the motherboard. I would suggest heading to your local computer store and asking about sound cards with optical ports. The cables are a little expensive being about $10 for a 3 footer.
Take me to your leader! I bare the claws of a corndog.