by Iggy64 » Mon Mar 09, 2009 12:24 pm
Just to complete this thread, in case other readers might have an interest ---
People were kind enough to point out various options for connecting my PC to my home stereo. I figured I'd start out with the cheapest approach, then work my way up through the more-expensive options until the sound quality approached CD quality, or something close enough. I am happy to report that, in my case, the least-expensive option worked amazingly well. I found a 50 ft mini-jack to dual RCA cable for about $9.00, connected my sound card's analog output to my stereo's CD inputs (I no longer use a conventional CD player, so those jacks were available), and started playing WAV, MP3, and streaming MP3 and ogg files on my home audio system. The quality is amazingly good. If a rip a CD to WAVs and play over the home audio, it seems indistinguishable from the same CD played through my DVD player.
So, at least in my case, the simple and cheap approach has worked out very well. If you are thinking about playing your files through your home stereo, it might be worth trying this approach. I'm sure it won't always work, depending on your sound card, potential sources of EMI, the quality of your speakers, etc. But apparently sometimes it does work very well.
Thanks again to all who offered suggestions.
Just to complete this thread, in case other readers might have an interest ---
People were kind enough to point out various options for connecting my PC to my home stereo. I figured I'd start out with the cheapest approach, then work my way up through the more-expensive options until the sound quality approached CD quality, or something close enough. I am happy to report that, in my case, the least-expensive option worked amazingly well. I found a 50 ft mini-jack to dual RCA cable for about $9.00, connected my sound card's analog output to my stereo's CD inputs (I no longer use a conventional CD player, so those jacks were available), and started playing WAV, MP3, and streaming MP3 and ogg files on my home audio system. The quality is amazingly good. If a rip a CD to WAVs and play over the home audio, it seems indistinguishable from the same CD played through my DVD player.
So, at least in my case, the simple and cheap approach has worked out very well. If you are thinking about playing your files through your home stereo, it might be worth trying this approach. I'm sure it won't always work, depending on your sound card, potential sources of EMI, the quality of your speakers, etc. But apparently sometimes it does work very well.
Thanks again to all who offered suggestions.