Surround Sound: Difference between revisions

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Surround sound requires a digital connection between the computer and stereo. There are several ways to do this:
Surround sound requires a digital connection between the computer and stereo. There are several ways to do this:


1) S/PDIF over coaxial cable
* S/PDIF over coaxial cable
2) S/PDIF over optical cable
* S/PDIF over optical cable
3) HDMI audio
* HDMI audio


Since the connection is digital, all methods will provide the same quality.
Since the connection is digital, all methods will provide the same quality.


The cheapest and most widely supported method is using a coaxial S/PDIF cable. The connectors can vary, but normally you need a cable with an RCA plug on each end. If you need to run the cable a long ways, using television coaxial cable with screw on RCA ends is a nice solution.
The cheapest and most widely supported method is using a coaxial S/PDIF cable. The connectors can vary, but normally you need a cable with an RCA plug on each end. If you need to run the cable a long ways, using television coaxial cable with screw on RCA ends is a nice solution.



== Test the PC to stereo connection ==
== Test the PC to stereo connection ==

Revision as of 18:32, 27 July 2009

Introduction

Below are the steps required to get surround sound playback from Media Center during DVD or Television playback.


Get the right equipment

You will need a stereo that is capable of playing surround sound. Check that your stereo accepts a digital connection (called S/PDIF or HDMI) and that it can decode surround sound formats like Dolby Digital (sometimes called AC3) and DTS.

You will need a set of 5.1 or 7.1 speakers connected to the stereo.

You will also need a copy of J. River Media Center installed on your computer. This documentation describes version 14 of J. River Media Center, although other versions may be similar.


Test your stereo

Most stereos can play a test tone to all of the connected speakers. Use the test tone feature of your stereo to make sure you have all of your surround sound speakers connected properly, have the volume high enough to hear, and don't have the stereo muted.

After testing the stereo and verifying that all the surround speakers are working, also check that the amplifier is in a mode where it is not doing extra processing of the signal. This mode is called Auto Format Decode (AFD) on Sony amplifiers.


Connect your PC to your stereo

Next, we must connect the computer to the stereo.

Surround sound requires a digital connection between the computer and stereo. There are several ways to do this:

  • S/PDIF over coaxial cable
  • S/PDIF over optical cable
  • HDMI audio

Since the connection is digital, all methods will provide the same quality.

The cheapest and most widely supported method is using a coaxial S/PDIF cable. The connectors can vary, but normally you need a cable with an RCA plug on each end. If you need to run the cable a long ways, using television coaxial cable with screw on RCA ends is a nice solution.

Test the PC to stereo connection

Now we need to make sure the computer is correctly connected to the computer. We will do this by playing test sounds out of the computer until we hear sound on the stereo.

A simple way to test a sound card, on Vista and Windows 7, is to open Control Panel and view the 'Sound' page. It will list all of the sound devices on your system and allow you to right-click and 'Test' each device.

Use this test functionality to find the correct sound device. If no device plays sounds, double-check that the stereo is set to use the input that you plugged the computer into on the back of the stereo.

Once you get sound to play, take note of the name of the sound device that you are using so that you can use this name later.


Configure Media Center to use this device for video, television, and DVD

In Media Center, open Options. (Tools > Options from the main menu) View the 'Playback' options page.

Click 'DirectShow video playback settings...'

Then, under 'Audio Renderer', select the name of the device that you configured in the last step. This may be, for example, “DirectSound: SPDIF Interface (SoundMAX Integrated HD Digital Audio)”.


Configure Media Center to pass an unaltered digital stream to the soundcard for DVD

Again in Options > Playback, pick 'DVD playback settings...'.

On Windows Vista or Windows 7 Premium: Under 'Audio Decoder', choose the Microsoft audio decoder

On Windows XP or non-premium Vista / Windows 7: Under 'Audio Decoder', choose ffdshow (requires installation of CCCP) Double-click 'ffdshow Audio Decoder' in the filter list and pick 'S/PDIF' for AC3 and DTS


Configure Media Center to pass an unaltered digital stream to the soundcard for television

Again in Options > Playback, pick 'TV settings...'.

Pick each device from the 'Devices' list and pick 'Configure...'. On the Digital TV tab, change the 'Audio Decoder' to match the choice made above for DVD.


How to know it's all working

Once everything is configured correctly, try playing a DVD or a television station. It is good to make sure the DVD or station is a high-quality one since some older DVDs and smaller television stations use stereo instead of surround sound.

You should see some indication on your amplifier that it is receiving and decoding a digital signal. On a Sony amplifier, it will scroll words like "Dolby Digital 3/2" and have a blue light illuminated any time surround sound is being received.