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- DIGITAL OPTICAL AUDIO TO USB CONVERTER DRIVERS
- DIGITAL OPTICAL AUDIO TO USB CONVERTER WINDOWS 10
- DIGITAL OPTICAL AUDIO TO USB CONVERTER PLUS
- DIGITAL OPTICAL AUDIO TO USB CONVERTER PROFESSIONAL
I’ve only used this a couple days so far, but so far I’ve been completely satisfied.
DIGITAL OPTICAL AUDIO TO USB CONVERTER PLUS
This digital optical solution completely circumvents that issue, not to mention avoiding degradation from digital-to-analogue plus analogue-to-digital conversions.
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I had to use a ground loop isolating transformer wired into my analogue connection to remove the ground loop interference. The other big hurdle I had to deal with when running analogue was circumventing a ground loop noise issue. It also seemed to have observably less lag than when running analogue, which was a welcome surprise to me. I was impressed with the improvement in audio quality when I switched to this instead of running analogue from my computer to my work laptop. I’m able to select this devices input as the “microphone” input for Teams or Jabber etc without issue. Then I’m using this device to receive the digital optical signal and and bring it in as an audio input on its own USB sound card (this) plugged into my work laptop. In my setup, I’m running a USB mic to my personal computer, processing the input through OBS with a noise filter, then sending the audio voice signal out from the digital optical port on my motherboard. Was a little confusing until I corrected the setting. My output and this defaulted to different bit and Hz settings in Windows 10, which resulted in background noise, intermittent performance, and the pitch of my voice being off.
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There are very few devices that are capable of filling this role, let alone at its price point.įirst – MAKE SURE TO CONFIGURE THE OUTPUT DEVICE AND THIS TO THE SAME bit AND Hz SETTINGS. I was surprised at what a narrow niche this product seems to occupy. This is a very handy little device that exactly met my needs. Only after correction of the audio format in Windows settings, all began to work just great! In audacity and wavosaur software, the recording was always made with double-speed 🙁 No settings correction to 44100hz/16bit for this input device did help there.
DIGITAL OPTICAL AUDIO TO USB CONVERTER WINDOWS 10
ISSUE in my case was the fact that every time I plugged in this USB device, Windows 10 was setting its default audio format to:Īnd this damaged any recording / listenning attempts with the software (such as audacity, wavosaur, VideoLAN player and also direct listening (“listen to this device” option in the settings). I learned to do the following after connecting this device to pc:ġ) open the Windows control panel for sound (Sound Settings) Ģ) find this device (named like … SPDIF Interface / UR32 USB…) on the “recording” (input) device tab ģ) open its properties (click the “properties” button) and go to the “Advanced” tab Ĥ) change/verify picklist value in the “default format” property: This can be solved by switching to a camera app that supports 48kHz audio (for example FiLMiC Pro), as the standard iOS camera app only supports 44.1kHz There is high latency when using it with an iPhone when the optical source is 48kHz. Dimensions:5.5 x 3.5 x 1.8 cm (without cable).Accepts 32kHz, 44.1kHz, 48kHz, 88.2kHz and 96kHz sample rates and 16 and 24 bit.Cable and adaptor for both TOSLINK and 3.5mm connector sources included.Optical SPDIF input through 3.5mm connector.We include a cable TOSLINK to 3.5mm and also a TOSLINK to 3.5mm adaptor, so that you can use it with either if your source has the bigger TOSLINK optical connector, or a 3.5mm optical output.
DIGITAL OPTICAL AUDIO TO USB CONVERTER PROFESSIONAL
It appears as an input device, and you can use any suitable recorder like the free Audacity or any other professional application to capture the stream.
DIGITAL OPTICAL AUDIO TO USB CONVERTER DRIVERS
It works in USB Audio Class 1 (sample rates up to 96kHz/24bit) and works without drivers with all major systems and programs Windows, MAC, Linux.
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