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I have a Optilink-A 2m optical cable.

A) Does it connect from my Reciever to TV or Cable Box?

B) What's the use in audio traveling through high quality "synthetic fiber" when the audio eventually has to go through my (copper) speaker wire?

2006-12-31 03:04:34 · 2 answers · asked by Rob S 1 in Consumer Electronics Home Theater

2 answers

Optical cable is able to send DTS 5.1 surround sound from the source (Cable box, DVD player) to your receiver. You will need to use this cable to play Digital Theater Sound DTS. Just using Left and Right RCA cables will just allow stereo sound.

2006-12-31 03:15:44 · answer #1 · answered by quixotic1x 2 · 0 0

There is nothing particularly "high-quality" about optical fiber cables. The same signals can be carried by coax wire cables with no difference. Many receivers have both coax and optical digital inputs, but many cable boxes and HDTV tuners have only optical outputs. You can get a converter to go from one to the other without any degradation. This is because the signals are digital, and they either get through perfectly or not at all. The only advantage to using optical cable over coax is if you are in an extremely noisy electrical environment (near heavy-duty motors, for example) and the coax shielding is not enough to prevent the signal from being corrupted.

2006-12-31 11:33:39 · answer #2 · answered by gp4rts 7 · 0 0

It goes between your receiver and cable box for a uncompressed digital signal. This can also be accomplished with a regular single digital cable. Either way it allows you to recieve the digital signals inculding DTS. Really the point is it has the bandwidth to have the digital signal ran through it. You get a cyrstal clear sound where each speaker will have its own sounds as it was recorded.

2006-12-31 03:45:00 · answer #3 · answered by bdat40oz 2 · 0 0

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