caseyh said:
I am trying to decide whether to hook up my Sony SCE-CD595 CD player (please note that though this is an SACD player, I am no longer using it to play SACDs) to my Harmon Kardon AVR 520 receiver with a Monter Cable Lightspeed digital fiber-optic toslink line or with a pair of MC Interlink 400mkII analog RCAs.
I imagine the CD player is reading the digital data off the disc turning it into an analog signal, then converting it back to a digital signal before sending it down the fiber-optic line after which the receiver converts it back to analog.
No, if you use the Toslink (or other digital connection), the CD player is merely grabbing the digital data off the disc and piping it to the AVR's DAC, which then does the conversion to analog (also applying whatever DSP you may have enabled first -- e.g. Dolby Pro Logic II). In this sort of setup, your CD player is merely a 'transport'. Its DAC and related circuitry isn't used at all. The receiver does all the heavy conversion work.
By the same line of thinking, I imagine that the digital signal from the CD is converted to analog only one time and stays that way all the way through the RCAs and into my receiver.
That's true only if you don't apply any digital sound processing in the receiver.
If you *do* apply DSP in your receiver, then an analog signal output from the CD player is re-digitized, processed in the digital domain, then re-converted to analog.
In any case, you could connect both the Toslink and the 2-channel analog, and simply switch back and forth between the inputs, to decide which sounds better to you.