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#1
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Drifting round John Lewis the other day and peering at the various
connections on the backs, I wondered why none of the sets seemed to have external speaker connections available. As the sets get thinner, the sound quality gets worse. Yet the only way to get decent sound seems to be through complicated connections to external amps, soundbars, and the like. The audio outputs from TVs can easily supply tens of watts to speakers, so why not have a simple speaker output to a couple of stereo speakers? Or is it that rather than do that, the manufacturers want us to spend a fortune on 5.1 or 7.1 surround sound equipment, rather than a couple of speakers which we probably already have available? -- Jeff |
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#2
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"Jeff Layman" wrote in message
... Drifting round John Lewis the other day and peering at the various connections on the backs, I wondered why none of the sets seemed to have external speaker connections available. As the sets get thinner, the sound quality gets worse. Yet the only way to get decent sound seems to be through complicated connections to external amps, soundbars, and the like. The audio outputs from TVs can easily supply tens of watts to speakers, so why not have a simple speaker output to a couple of stereo speakers? Or is it that rather than do that, the manufacturers want us to spend a fortune on 5.1 or 7.1 surround sound equipment, rather than a couple of speakers which we probably already have available? Two solutions: Get a half decent pair of computer speakers and plug into the headphone socket; If you have a spare pair of proper speakers find yourself a small cheap secondhand hi-fi amp and use that to drive them, again using the headphone output. I have faced a similar problem in our caravan as my wife has a hearing deficiency. I built a small line amp (from a Maplin kit) which feeds into the (fitted) car radio and source it from the TV headphone socket. It not only works well but the audio quality is significantly better without the need for the volume levels. -- Woody harrogate three at ntlworld dot com |
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#3
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In article , Jeff Layman
wrote: The audio outputs from TVs can easily supply tens of watts to speakers, so why not have a simple speaker output to a couple of stereo speakers? I wonder if this is true for modern run-of-the-mill TVs. Maybe they are more like portable radios these days and can just supply a few watts peak at high levels of distortion? Be interested in anyone who can give measured figures. Or is it that rather than do that, the manufacturers want us to spend a fortune on 5.1 or 7.1 surround sound equipment, rather than a couple of speakers which we probably already have available? If you already have good speakers, you probably also have a decent amp to drive them. And if you already use them in the same room for audio, why not also for the TV? Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
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#4
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On Thu, 2 Jan 2014 08:54:14 -0000, Woody wrote:
"Jeff Layman" wrote in message ... Drifting round John Lewis the other day and peering at the various connections on the backs, I wondered why none of the sets seemed to have external speaker connections available. As the sets get thinner, the sound quality gets worse. Yet the only way to get decent sound seems to be through complicated connections to external amps, soundbars, and the like. The audio outputs from TVs can easily supply tens of watts to speakers, so why not have a simple speaker output to a couple of stereo speakers? Or is it that rather than do that, the manufacturers want us to spend a fortune on 5.1 or 7.1 surround sound equipment, rather than a couple of speakers which we probably already have available? My Panny has no audio output other than SPDIF and HDMI (one socket has AVR). Two solutions: Get a half decent pair of computer speakers and plug into the headphone socket; If you have a spare pair of proper speakers find yourself a small cheap secondhand hi-fi amp and use that to drive them, again using the headphone output. This worked well on the Samsung but not on the Panny. The socket on the Panny doesn't cut the speakers and the volume control has no effect, so I use it on Freesat only. If I go to Freeview the sound blasts out. I have faced a similar problem in our caravan as my wife has a hearing deficiency. I built a small line amp (from a Maplin kit) which feeds into the (fitted) car radio and source it from the TV headphone socket. It not only works well but the audio quality is significantly better without the need for the volume levels. -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway |
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#5
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I suspect its the way to sell other kit. i bet most of the manufacturers
have their own branded sound systems. it has always been that way. Not too many tvs have speaker sockets. Also many tvs have fixed tweaks in their amps to ofset thetinny speak problem to some extent, so to give you sockets, they would have to disable that somehow. add to this that they consider most people incapable of not shorting out the speakers and blowing the set up. What socket do they fit? Where is the standard for this? Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "Jeff Layman" wrote in message ... Drifting round John Lewis the other day and peering at the various connections on the backs, I wondered why none of the sets seemed to have external speaker connections available. As the sets get thinner, the sound quality gets worse. Yet the only way to get decent sound seems to be through complicated connections to external amps, soundbars, and the like. The audio outputs from TVs can easily supply tens of watts to speakers, so why not have a simple speaker output to a couple of stereo speakers? Or is it that rather than do that, the manufacturers want us to spend a fortune on 5.1 or 7.1 surround sound equipment, rather than a couple of speakers which we probably already have available? -- Jeff |
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#6
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In article ,
Jeff Layman wrote: Drifting round John Lewis the other day and peering at the various connections on the backs, I wondered why none of the sets seemed to have external speaker connections available. As the sets get thinner, the sound quality gets worse. Yet the only way to get decent sound seems to be through complicated connections to external amps, soundbars, and the like. The audio outputs from TVs can easily supply tens of watts to speakers, so why not have a simple speaker output to a couple of stereo speakers? Or is it that rather than do that, the manufacturers want us to spend a fortune on 5.1 or 7.1 surround sound equipment, rather than a couple of speakers which we probably already have available? Apart from cost, I'd say it's because the internal amp is 'fiddled' to cope with the small rear facing speakers. It more annoys me that they don't provide an analogue line output. How many Hi-Fi amps have an optical input? And is a long optical cable (and wall plates) to reach a distant amp even possible? -- *Someday, we'll look back on this, laugh nervously and change the subject Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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#7
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In article ,
Woody wrote: Two solutions: Get a half decent pair of computer speakers and plug into the headphone socket; If you have a spare pair of proper speakers find yourself a small cheap secondhand hi-fi amp and use that to drive them, again using the headphone output. The headphone output on my Samsung is not of the highest quality. It has what sounds like old fashioned frame buzz on it which changes with picture content. I've not yet rigged up the optical output to my Hi-Fi. I'm hoping that at least will be 'clean'. -- *I'm pretty sure that sex is better than logic, but I can't prove it. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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#8
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In article , Dave Plowman (News)
wrote: In article , Jeff Layman wrote: Drifting round John Lewis the other day and peering at the various connections on the backs, I wondered why none of the sets seemed to have external speaker connections available. It more annoys me that they don't provide an analogue line output. How many Hi-Fi amps have an optical input? And is a long optical cable (and wall plates) to reach a distant amp even possible? The longest 'optical' digital lead I have is 5 metres. This works OK. But at such lengths for the 'plastic rope' leads, success will depend on the details of the transmitter and receiver as well as the quality of the lead. Found other other leads half that length that don't work. FWIW Use this with a cheap DAC from CPC as part of one of my DIY 'headDACs' and it seems fine. Works at 96k as well. For longer leads I'd probably use an optical-coax convertor and a long run of coax for the spdif. On 02 Jan in uk.tech.digital-tv, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: I've not yet rigged up the optical output to my Hi-Fi. I'm hoping that at least will be 'clean'. Optical should at least avoid ground or rf loops. After that, it'll depend on the source, etc. Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
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#9
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In article ,
Jim Lesurf wrote: It more annoys me that they don't provide an analogue line output. How many Hi-Fi amps have an optical input? And is a long optical cable (and wall plates) to reach a distant amp even possible? The longest 'optical' digital lead I have is 5 metres. This works OK. But at such lengths for the 'plastic rope' leads, success will depend on the details of the transmitter and receiver as well as the quality of the lead. Found other other leads half that length that don't work. All the wiring twixt TV and Hi-Fi goes under the floor here. Is it possible to go TV to wallplate in optical, then wallplate to amp again in optical? I have room for an optical to analogue converter at the Hi-Fi - but not at the TV. -- *I didn't say it was your fault, I said I was blaming you. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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#10
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On 02/01/2014 08:38, Jeff Layman wrote:
Drifting round John Lewis the other day and peering at the various connections on the backs, I wondered why none of the sets seemed to have external speaker connections available. As the sets get thinner, the sound quality gets worse. Yet the only way to get decent sound seems to be through complicated connections to external amps, soundbars, and the like. complicated how? a hdmi cable will do it with the right bar/amplifier - no complication at all. -- Gareth. That fly.... Is your magic wand. |
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