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The question is, how can it be done, when DP is connected to a monitor? I.e. I don't want to use monitor's built in DAC which is likely very low quality, but want to find a high quality external one. How can such setup be organized? Can one DP output go to the monitor, and another to DAC for example?
And a question about DACs. I'm not an expert, and searching around I found the ODAC project which is described as one of the best DAC designs:
https://nwavguy.blogspot.com/2012/04/odac-released.html
There are hardware implementations, like JDS Labs DACs: https://jdslabs.com/shop/?category=featured
But they are using USB for input. How DP can be used in such case, or I'd need to find a DAC that takes DP in somehow? Or it's done on the audio driver level, and the signal from the video card's built in audio can be routed to the USB?
Last edited by Shmerl on 4 December 2019 at 1:13 am UTC
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Last edited by Shmerl on 4 December 2019 at 2:32 am UTC
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I myself for example use Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 for the last 5 years or more. Works amazingly
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currently pulseaudio will allow you to route audio to any audio channel you prefer; DP, HDMI, USB, onboard audio, etc.
I currently have 2x 40in TVs attached to my rig, one via HDMI and the other via DP. in the audio setti gs i can choose which device i wish audio to be processed by. in my case, HDMI, DP, onboard audio. If i pair my bluetooth headset, i can route audio to that as well. You can also route audio from apps to certain devices, ergo, i can route game audio to HDMI and voice comms to the headset.
it is possible to purchase a HDMI/DP audio extractor and attach that to an output such as a home theatre system if you'd like.
I'm not sure how the sound quality would compare to SPDIF as I've never used SPDIF so i have no point of reference.
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I'll probably go with USB or SPDIF for now.
Last edited by Shmerl on 4 December 2019 at 10:05 pm UTC
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From all the sources, it looks quite solid.
SPDIF doesn't support uncompressed audio with more than 2 channels. That said, it's rock solid 80's technology usually implemented in pure hardware on the DAC side. TOSLINK can give you optical isolation, but I don't think any digital audio (DP, HDMI, SPDIF over RCA) implementation worth anything would leak significant interference to the analog side. It would still protect your DAC from voltage spikes should something terrible happen to your PC. One possible future problem is that fewer and fewer motherboards come with optical out these days and the situation is probably only going to get worse. I remember watching some MB comparison video where an SPDIF connector was derisively called "obsolete". The guy probably thinks the same about 3.5mm jacks...
AFAIK you could put pretty much anything through USB as long as you have the appropriate hardware and drivers. Multichannel is supported in the standard, but I don't know how useful/used it is in practice. As usual there is plenty of proprietary BS going on with these devices.
Since you seem to be looking at headphone amps, you probably won't need to transfer multichannel audio anyway. That JDS DAC doesn't support 192kHz sample rate so remember not to feed it that. Qualitywise 96kHz will sound exactly the same. Supposing you can even find material on that quality level.
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Interesting. I've never used SPDIF before, but actually mostly high end motherboards support it. Asrock X570 Taichi has it. Hopefully they aren't planning to drop it any time soon. It's for sure not any more "obsolete" than a regular 3.5 mm audio jack.
So USB can also drive surround, using regular open standards? That's good.
Yes, regarding surround that was just in theory, right now I plan to make a setup for headphones, that's why I was looking at that DAC and amplifier. As you said, SPDIF / TOSLINK should be good enough for that. I'll take a look at frequency that's fed to the output. Is that something that's configured on the ALSA level?
Last edited by Shmerl on 6 December 2019 at 1:00 am UTC
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You need to tinker away with pulseaudio / ALSA to enable the better bitdepths and sample rates. By default you probably only get 44.1/48 kHz @ 16-bits. Meaning that everything else is sampled to one of those. Coincidentally I'm personally fine with the defaults. All my music goes out in its native 44.1/16b resolution when it's the only source playing. I'm not so picky about other audio. For mixing multiple audio sources a better bit depth could theoretically help, but I don't really see the point.
I think this write-up explains the realities of digital audio playback much better than I can.