I may be a bit of a rare bird, but I'm looking for a 7.2 preamp, namely, something that will take HDMI in, separate it into 7.2, and provide line-level (preferably balanced) audio outputs which I will feed to a
power amp as well as the ability to select from multiple HDMI inputs
and send video to an HDMI (hopefully HDCP2.2 compatible) output.
I do not need a power amp and I'd rather not pay for one if I'm just
going to bypass it (presuming a receiver has pre-outs) to go to my power-amp(s).
I would also appreciate a variety of 7.2 mixdown modes, e.g., to
2-channel stereo, 4-channel, etc., and the ability to route the bass
channels in a variety of ways.
I saw the NAD C501 which looks somewhat like what I'm after, but it only
has stereo two-channel audio outputs.
Any pointers or thoughts would be appreciated.
Wow, active group these days....
Randy Yates <yates@digitalsignallabs.com> writes:
I may be a bit of a rare bird, but I'm looking for a 7.2 preamp, namely,
something that will take HDMI in, separate it into 7.2, and provide
line-level (preferably balanced) audio outputs which I will feed to a
power amp as well as the ability to select from multiple HDMI inputs
and send video to an HDMI (hopefully HDCP2.2 compatible) output.
I do not need a power amp and I'd rather not pay for one if I'm just
going to bypass it (presuming a receiver has pre-outs) to go to my
power-amp(s).
I would also appreciate a variety of 7.2 mixdown modes, e.g., to
2-channel stereo, 4-channel, etc., and the ability to route the bass
channels in a variety of ways.
I saw the NAD C501 which looks somewhat like what I'm after, but it only
has stereo two-channel audio outputs.
Any pointers or thoughts would be appreciated.
On 5/08/2017 11:54 AM, Randy Yates wrote:
Wow, active group these days....
Yep not too active, but probably a few like me who saw your post and
have no idea of any devices that fit your requirements. I can only say
I'd agree with your comment, "a bit of a rare bird". Probably not a
big enough market. Most people just buy a sound bar these days, or a
full HT receiver.
Trevor.
Randy Yates <yates@digitalsignallabs.com> writes:
I may be a bit of a rare bird, but I'm looking for a 7.2 preamp,
namely, something that will take HDMI in, separate it into 7.2, and
provide line-level (preferably balanced) audio outputs which I will
feed to a power amp as well as the ability to select from multiple
HDMI inputs and send video to an HDMI (hopefully HDCP2.2
compatible) output. I do not need a power amp and I'd rather not pay for >>> one if I'm just
going to bypass it (presuming a receiver has pre-outs) to go to my
power-amp(s).
I would also appreciate a variety of 7.2 mixdown modes, e.g., to
2-channel stereo, 4-channel, etc., and the ability to route the bass
channels in a variety of ways.
I saw the NAD C501 which looks somewhat like what I'm after, but it
only has stereo two-channel audio outputs.
Any pointers or thoughts would be appreciated.
Wow, active group these days....
Randy Yates <yates@digitalsignallabs.com> writes:
I may be a bit of a rare bird, but I'm looking for a 7.2 preamp, namely,
something that will take HDMI in, separate it into 7.2, and provide
line-level (preferably balanced) audio outputs which I will feed to a
power amp as well as the ability to select from multiple HDMI inputs
and send video to an HDMI (hopefully HDCP2.2 compatible) output.
I do not need a power amp and I'd rather not pay for one if I'm just
going to bypass it (presuming a receiver has pre-outs) to go to my
power-amp(s).
I would also appreciate a variety of 7.2 mixdown modes, e.g., to
2-channel stereo, 4-channel, etc., and the ability to route the bass
channels in a variety of ways.
I saw the NAD C501 which looks somewhat like what I'm after, but it only
has stereo two-channel audio outputs.
Any pointers or thoughts would be appreciated.
Good morning all,
I'm a bit surprised by your comments. I had replied directly to the
original poster. There are several AV preamp -processors on the
market, such as the NAD T187 and M17, Arcam AV860, Rotel RSP-1582,
McIntosh MX160, MX122, MX121.
These are certainly NOT cost saving alternatives, as they are often
just as expensive as the same company's 'top end' AV receivers, but
they are available.
Regards,
Tim
On 8/4/2017 9:54 PM, Randy Yates wrote:
Wow, active group these days....
Randy Yates <yates@digitalsignallabs.com> writes:
I may be a bit of a rare bird, but I'm looking for a 7.2 preamp,
namely, something that will take HDMI in, separate it into 7.2, and
provide line-level (preferably balanced) audio outputs which I will
feed to a power amp as well as the ability to select from multiple
HDMI inputs and send video to an HDMI (hopefully HDCP2.2
compatible) output. I do not need a power amp and I'd rather not pay for >>> one if I'm just
going to bypass it (presuming a receiver has pre-outs) to go to my
power-amp(s).
I would also appreciate a variety of 7.2 mixdown modes, e.g., to
2-channel stereo, 4-channel, etc., and the ability to route the bass
channels in a variety of ways.
I saw the NAD C501 which looks somewhat like what I'm after, but it
only has stereo two-channel audio outputs.
Any pointers or thoughts would be appreciated.
Once upon a time on usenet Tim Schwartz wrote:
Good morning all,
I'm a bit surprised by your comments. I had replied directly to the
original poster. There are several AV preamp -processors on the
market, such as the NAD T187 and M17, Arcam AV860, Rotel RSP-1582,
McIntosh MX160, MX122, MX121.
These are certainly NOT cost saving alternatives, as they are often
just as expensive as the same company's 'top end' AV receivers, but
they are available.
Regards,
Tim
Hi Tim. Your previous reply didn't show up in my newsreader.
"~misfit~" <shaun.at.pukekohe@gmail.com> writes:
Once upon a time on usenet Tim Schwartz wrote:
Good morning all,
I'm a bit surprised by your comments. I had replied directly to the
original poster. There are several AV preamp -processors on the
market, such as the NAD T187 and M17, Arcam AV860, Rotel RSP-1582,
McIntosh MX160, MX122, MX121.
These are certainly NOT cost saving alternatives, as they are often
just as expensive as the same company's 'top end' AV receivers, but
they are available.
Regards,
Tim
Hi Tim. Your previous reply didn't show up in my newsreader.
He emailed me directly. I didn't mind, but I think it's more
beneficial to put it out here in the group.
Thanks again, Tim, these are great suggestions.
On 5/08/2017 11:54 AM, Randy Yates wrote:
Wow, active group these days....
Yep not too active, but probably a few like me who saw your post and
have no idea of any devices that fit your requirements. I can only say
I'd agree with your comment, "a bit of a rare bird". Probably not a big enough market. Most people just buy a sound bar these days, or a full HT receiver.
On 5/08/2017 7:59 PM, Trevor wrote:
On 5/08/2017 11:54 AM, Randy Yates wrote:
Wow, active group these days....
Yep not too active, but probably a few like me who saw your post and
have no idea of any devices that fit your requirements. I can only
say I'd agree with your comment, "a bit of a rare bird". Probably
not a big enough market. Most people just buy a sound bar these
days, or a full HT receiver.
As I found. Needed a sound-bar because these latest ultra-thin TV seem
to have sound so tinny that it is pretty much unlistenable. And
firing up the stereo hook-up is too much hassle for 'everyday'
viewing. I save the stereo for 'special ' events.
But 7.2 , why ? Why not 11-6 or 15.9 ? Or maybe just 8 for real 3D.
geoff <geoff@nospamgeoffwood.org> writes:
On 5/08/2017 7:59 PM, Trevor wrote:
On 5/08/2017 11:54 AM, Randy Yates wrote:
Wow, active group these days....
Yep not too active, but probably a few like me who saw your post and
have no idea of any devices that fit your requirements. I can only
say I'd agree with your comment, "a bit of a rare bird". Probably
not a big enough market. Most people just buy a sound bar these
days, or a full HT receiver.
As I found. Needed a sound-bar because these latest ultra-thin TV seem
to have sound so tinny that it is pretty much unlistenable. And
firing up the stereo hook-up is too much hassle for 'everyday'
viewing. I save the stereo for 'special ' events.
But 7.2 , why ? Why not 11-6 or 15.9 ? Or maybe just 8 for real 3D.
Because that's the current standard? Except for this Dolby Atmos thingie
now.
Actually I've been existing just fine for 50 years on 2.0, including my
home theater room. Plain old stereo works pretty good when the audio
system is powerful, clean, and wide-range (the Klipschorns go reasonably
well down to 30 Hz).
At this point I've given up on a prebuilt unit and am leaning towards a PC-based system. I am thinking of using something like this for the
audio:
https://us.focusrite.com/usb-audio-interfaces/scarlett-2i2
I'll start with one box (two outputs) and add more if needed.
The question of the type of PC is currently a big issue. I've considered units
like this fanless PC
https://www.logicsupply.com/ml450g-52/
or just a plain laptop so that I can have the system in the theater and
not have to deal with some sort of USB and HDMI extender, but I'm also attracted to the idea of a full-power desktop to provide plenty of
storage and a PCI-e bus for a powerful 4K graphics card like the Nvidia
X.
PS: One big issue in basing it on a PC is the ability to play new BluRay
DVDs and the copy protection is a real bear to get around.
A potential way around that is to buy an HDMI input card, then transcode
to the system HDMI output. But then the HDCP copy protection revision of
the input card becomes an issue.
geoff <geoff@nospamgeoffwood.org> writes:
On 5/08/2017 7:59 PM, Trevor wrote:
On 5/08/2017 11:54 AM, Randy Yates wrote:
Wow, active group these days....
Yep not too active, but probably a few like me who saw your post and
have no idea of any devices that fit your requirements. I can only
say I'd agree with your comment, "a bit of a rare bird". Probably
not a big enough market. Most people just buy a sound bar these
days, or a full HT receiver.
As I found. Needed a sound-bar because these latest ultra-thin TV seem
to have sound so tinny that it is pretty much unlistenable. And
firing up the stereo hook-up is too much hassle for 'everyday'
viewing. I save the stereo for 'special ' events.
But 7.2 , why ? Why not 11-6 or 15.9 ? Or maybe just 8 for real 3D.
Because that's the current standard? Except for this Dolby Atmos thingie
now.
On 28/10/2017 10:30 PM, Randy Yates wrote:
PS: One big issue in basing it on a PC is the ability to play new BluRay
DVDs and the copy protection is a real bear to get around.
A potential way around that is to buy an HDMI input card, then transcode
to the system HDMI output. But then the HDCP copy protection revision of
the input card becomes an issue.
Can you just rip the Bluray to hard drive and remove the copy
protection using something like DVDFab, like you can for DVD?
Trevor <trevor@home.net> writes:
On 28/10/2017 10:30 PM, Randy Yates wrote:
PS: One big issue in basing it on a PC is the ability to play new BluRay >>> DVDs and the copy protection is a real bear to get around.
A potential way around that is to buy an HDMI input card, then transcode >>> to the system HDMI output. But then the HDCP copy protection revision of >>> the input card becomes an issue.
Can you just rip the Bluray to hard drive and remove the copy
protection using something like DVDFab, like you can for DVD?
Hi Trevor,
First note that I'll be using linux. I don't think DVDFab will
run under linux.
Also note that I don't need to do anything special for DVDs - opensource
apps like vlc play them just fine without any messing with.
Apparently the Blu-ray DRM is more advanced and changes, making it more difficult to "crack." I read some about it here but admit it still seems quite mysterious:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Blu-ray
Hi Randy,
I have no personal experience with BluRay since I don't have a BluRay
drive in my computer. I think that DVDFab can remove the protection from BluRay disks though. Whether there is something similar for Linux I have
no idea, but possibly worth a look.
Hi Randy,
I have no personal experience with BluRay since I don't have a BluRay
drive in my computer. I think that DVDFab can remove the protection
from BluRay disks though. Whether there is something similar for Linux
I have no idea, but possibly worth a look.
Trevor.
On 2/11/2017 12:57 PM, Randy Yates wrote:
Trevor <trevor@home.net> writes:
On 28/10/2017 10:30 PM, Randy Yates wrote:
PS: One big issue in basing it on a PC is the ability to play new BluRay >>>> DVDs and the copy protection is a real bear to get around.
A potential way around that is to buy an HDMI input card, then transcode >>>> to the system HDMI output. But then the HDCP copy protection revision of >>>> the input card becomes an issue.
Can you just rip the Bluray to hard drive and remove the copy
protection using something like DVDFab, like you can for DVD?
Hi Trevor,
First note that I'll be using linux. I don't think DVDFab will
run under linux.
Also note that I don't need to do anything special for DVDs - opensource
apps like vlc play them just fine without any messing with.
Apparently the Blu-ray DRM is more advanced and changes, making it more
difficult to "crack." I read some about it here but admit it still seems
quite mysterious:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Blu-ray
Trevor <trevor@home.net> writes:
Hi Randy,
I have no personal experience with BluRay since I don't have a BluRay
drive in my computer. I think that DVDFab can remove the protection
from BluRay disks though. Whether there is something similar for Linux
I have no idea, but possibly worth a look.
I can certainly fire up my win10 vm and use it there, it's just
inconvenient.
Thanks much for the suggestion, Trevor.
Thanks much for the suggestion, Trevor.
You are more than welcome if it is any help.
Thanks much for the suggestion, Trevor.
You are more than welcome if it is any help.
So if it wasn't of any help, then he's not welcome?
On 30/11/2017 5:31 AM, Tobiah wrote:
Thanks much for the suggestion, Trevor.
You are more than welcome if it is any help.
So if it wasn't of any help, then he's not welcome?
I know it's a bit slow here, but stupid comments don't add much value. :-(
On 11/29/2017 05:02 PM, Trevor wrote:
On 30/11/2017 5:31 AM, Tobiah wrote:
Thanks much for the suggestion, Trevor.
You are more than welcome if it is any help.
So if it wasn't of any help, then he's not welcome?
I know it's a bit slow here, but stupid comments don't add much value.
:-(
Then it's a wonder that you hang out on rec.audio.pro!
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