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My DVD player for the Panasonic sa-ht930 surround sound is DONE BAKED ETC. my questions is .. is there a way to use the surrond sound without the dvd/receiver (everything plugs into dvdvia monster plug), is the a conversation plug?????

2007-12-26 01:32:20 · 4 answers · asked by lawnman 2 in Consumer Electronics Home Theater

4 answers

I'm almost certain there is no conversion plug - if your DVD playing part of the Panasonic system is broken then unfortunately the supplied 'system cable' which takes the sound for all 6 channels to the subwoofer is a special one and the subwoofer has only an input for this type of cable, as per page 12 of the Operating Manual. Also as per one or two comments on forums.
Most DVD players will output sound as coaxial or optical digital, and phono.
Pretty sure you'll have to get the system main DVD unit repaired, or get a new system.

2007-12-26 04:20:40 · answer #1 · answered by n_gined 4 · 0 1

Panasonic Sa-ht930

2016-11-11 02:02:17 · answer #2 · answered by wiltrout 4 · 0 0

Like the other pros in their answers, stay a way from Bose, Yes i do this for a living too. I am not going to specify a brad cuz i don't know your budget. So with out a budget my recommendation is to spend the same amount on speakers that you spent on your DVD, CD, and Receiver combined. So if you have a $200 DVD + $100 CD + $700 receiver then spend $1000 on the speakers or more if you have the cash. Speakers make the biggest difference! Also for music and movies, if your budget allows, get something with larger front speakers that can represent bass. Subs are fine if that's the system you can afford, although bass is mostly non-directional, even i can tell where a 30Hz tone is coming from so frontal bass is more satisfying. And by all means if you can afford larger front and a sub then do both. Listening tip, people tend to buy overly bright or bass sounding speakers (Bose) because side by side to a "smooth" pair they seem to sound better. That is until you get fatigued from listening to them. So think when you are listening "wow that treble is crisp and loud, sounds good"...... think about it, is it over the top, is that going to bug me when I'm watching a movie? hope this helps

2016-03-14 11:11:26 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You only have analog audio inputs on the back of your receiver, so I would say no.

You could hook up a new DVD player using the stereo inputs called TV, VCR or Aux on the back of your unit, but then you will have to listen to "simulated" surround. No Dolby Digital, no DTS.

2007-12-26 04:09:08 · answer #4 · answered by Pragmatism Please 7 · 2 0

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