Is S/PDIF worth using?

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Solution 1

The answer is, of course, it depends. The advantage of S/PDIF (both coax and optical) is that it carries a digital signal down the line. This is essential when you're doing things like sending a DTS or Dolby Digital (AC3) signal to a receiver which can decode those signals. Often receivers have better digital to analog converters than on board audio controllers. Additionally, if your speakers are far away, an S/PDIF allows you to carry 5.1 over just one cable.

However, if you're just piping audio from your computer to a set of inexpensive desktop surround speakers, you're not going to hear much of a difference in most cases. If you can provide more details about your setup, it'll be easier to answer if S/PDIF is right for you.

Solution 2

While most tuners don't have coax S/PDIF support, they almost all have optical S/PDIF support. The good news there is that the signal is exactly the same. You can pick up a converter widget from Amazon for about 15 bucks that'll turn coax into optical (or vice versa) - which means you can happily pipe the motherboard coax signal into a new optical tuner.

This is, in fact, the exact setup I'm running now. Love it.

So yes, I'd say it was worth it. Surround sound off the PC with only one cable is pretty fantastic.

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Arnold Zokas
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Arnold Zokas

Updated on September 18, 2022

Comments

  • Arnold Zokas
    Arnold Zokas almost 2 years

    I have a surround sound system that accepts a coaxial S/PDIF input but I want to replace it with something new.

    90% of the motherboards I have used in the past 4 years had a coaxial S/PDIF output. The choice of S/PDIF-compatible surround sound systems is not so great.

    Is S/PDIF worth the effort?

  • jyoseph
    jyoseph almost 15 years
    I think that unless there is a premium on space, that all devices which receive these signals should have both.
  • Electrons_Ahoy
    Electrons_Ahoy almost 15 years
    Not so much, in my experience. My PC only has optical, and my tuner only has coax. It seems like a lot of items only have one or the other - probably under the assumption that converters exist.