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- 10 posts total
@cheeg hi, i was in your same position many years back but not with Cambridge products. i search everywhere even at DIY forums but to no avail. The HDMI to coax/optical converter doesn't work in our case because it ONLY WORK FOR consumer video players that output HDMI standard signals (video & audio) protocol. Audiophile products are just using the HDMI connectors out of convenience to stream DSD signals, definitely not the same signals from common household bluray player. There isn't a agreed standard between various manufacturers regarding the pin configuration within the HDMI connector too. you need to look for a DAC that accept DSD signals through HDMI connector that corresponds to Cambridge HDMI pin configuration, otherwise you are stuck with using a Cambridge DAC, in addition, even if you manage to find a converter that work with your USB input, IMHO, i think it isn't that worthwhile since the additional conversion would cause more jitters , plus additional digital cable & its connections would totally degrade your DSD signals. l'm sorry that maybe hard to accept. -phil |
Okay, this is not HDMI, it is only an HDMI connector. That changes everything. It is actually LVDS differential I2S on HDMI connector. The only way you will use this is to get a Wyred4sound DAC or a PSAudio DAC that has differential HDMI input. Make sure that they support the DSD function on that connector first and that the pinout is compatible. It usually is for HDMI. There are some converters out there that convert differential I2S on HDMI to single-ended TTL I2S like this one: https://hifimediy.com/i2s-DSD-isolator This will allow you to connect to more DAC's, like the Northstar, but requires a cable adapter. Get the pinout of the DAC's RJ-45 I2S input and make a cable. Steve N. Empirical Audio |
Thanks for the responses, folks -- I'm afraid this ship won't float. @whart you may be right, but the Cambridge tech support people said it was a "DSD" signal, so I assumed they meant unencrypted DSD -- you know what happens when you assume. It sounds like there is no simple conversion, so I'll just continue to listen to my SACD's the old fashioned way (which sounded good, it's just a bit inconvenient). Happy listening to you all! |
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