Geekzone: technology news, blogs, forums
Guest
Welcome Guest.
You haven't logged in yet. If you don't have an account you can register now.


3VILC

10 posts

Wannabe Geek


#116928 14-May-2013 12:18
Send private message

Hi guys,
Not sure if this has been asked before.  But I want to partially upgrade my home theater system.
I want to replace my TV and DVD player with a new LED HDTV of some sort but limited to 32" unfortunately by my nice solid wooden cabinet which I don't want to replace and noone seems to make 36/37" models anymore and a 40" is slightly too wide. And a new DVD/BR player.
I don't see much point replacing my perfectly good Sherwood 6.1 channel amp and would still like to use this to power the audio side of things. Only issue is the highest level video input on the amp is Y/Pb/Cr which is how it is currently connected to everything. Obviously to get the best picture I would want to change the new DVD player and satellite TV to use the TVs HDMI inputs, but what to do with the audio?
Is it likely that I can run a digital coax out from TV to amp and get 5.1 digital from whatever input source the TV is on? Or am I better off to run a seperate coax cable from each signal source to a separate amp input channel and have to select the desired source on TV and AMP?
I realize I  should just buy a new amp, but this one wasn't cheap at the time, and it still does an excellent job of powering my Wharfedales, so seems a waste just to get HDMI ports so I can be lazy and only have to change input channel on one device.

Any pointers are appreciated, obviously I got into home theater just before the HDMI bandwagon so am a little out of the loop :)

Cheers,
Clive 
 

Create new topic
trig42
5814 posts

Uber Geek

ID Verified

  #817337 14-May-2013 12:21
Send private message

If you receiver has digital Audio inputs, I would run separate cables to both the TV and receiver - I do not know if the TV would pass 5.1 back down to the receiver from its digital audio output.

This means you will need to change two sources when you change your viewing source (TV and Amp), but a Logitech Harmony remote would make that a lot nicer.



3VILC

10 posts

Wannabe Geek


  #817348 14-May-2013 12:34
Send private message

Thanks for that, I did read elsewhere that a lot of TVs actually only output 2ch stereo on the digital out so no good as an audio passthru.
Thats good then so all I will really need to buy extra is a DVD-TV HDMI cable, already have one that came with the freeview receiver and already have digital audio connected to both sources anyway.
Have to test and make sure amp will accept Coax audio without a valid video connection on that channel since the digital channels can only be tied to a video channel. Should be fine, I just remember having a TV that wouldn't display a picture unless the audio cable where connected to something even if there was no signal on them

Create new topic





News and reviews »

Air New Zealand Starts AI adoption with OpenAI
Posted 24-Jul-2025 16:00


eero Pro 7 Review
Posted 23-Jul-2025 12:07


BeeStation Plus Review
Posted 21-Jul-2025 14:21


eero Unveils New Wi-Fi 7 Products in New Zealand
Posted 21-Jul-2025 00:01


WiZ Introduces HDMI Sync Box and other Light Devices
Posted 20-Jul-2025 17:32


RedShield Enhances DDoS and Bot Attack Protection
Posted 20-Jul-2025 17:26


Seagate Ships 30TB Drives
Posted 17-Jul-2025 11:24


Oclean AirPump A10 Water Flosser Review
Posted 13-Jul-2025 11:05


Samsung Galaxy Z Fold7: Raising the Bar for Smartphones
Posted 10-Jul-2025 02:01


Samsung Galaxy Z Flip7 Brings New Edge-To-Edge FlexWindow
Posted 10-Jul-2025 02:01


Epson Launches New AM-C550Z WorkForce Enterprise printer
Posted 9-Jul-2025 18:22


Samsung Releases Smart Monitor M9
Posted 9-Jul-2025 17:46


Nearly Half of Older Kiwis Still Write their Passwords on Paper
Posted 9-Jul-2025 08:42


D-Link 4G+ Cat6 Wi-Fi 6 DWR-933M Mobile Hotspot Review
Posted 1-Jul-2025 11:34


Oppo A5 Series Launches With New Levels of Durability
Posted 30-Jun-2025 10:15









Geekzone Live »

Try automatic live updates from Geekzone directly in your browser, without refreshing the page, with Geekzone Live now.



Are you subscribed to our RSS feed? You can download the latest headlines and summaries from our stories directly to your computer or smartphone by using a feed reader.