I dug out an old MacBook that has a lot of music on it. I thought if I connected it to the receiver I could get the highest quality.files delivered to the 4500 for playback. The USB port on the front won’t support it.
I was thinking about using an Ethernet cable to connect in the back of the receiver. Will the work? or is Network connection meant for a router or modem only?
is my best bet an external hard drive connected to the USB port in the front?
thanks.
Post#10 has the possibilities listed. If none of that can work with your Macbook (depend on the model/year I guess), then most likely a low cost DAC can do the trick for you using the right interconnect cable such as:
3.5mm jack to RCA
I want to use the laptop as a dedicated music station. I want a way to play the highest quality music files directly without streaming. I was leaning towards a hard drive, but as Viorelec pointed oot, Denon does not guarantee it will power The drive. I will just buy and format a 32 gig drive and see how it goes.
If you really want the "highest quality music files......", then what is on your laptop may not be what you "want". I don't know that obviously but in my experience, even expensive media players, preamps, power amps, and speakers won't make much difference (may help somewhat in some cases) if the music files are not of high recording/mastering quality. And also in my experience, the chance to have very high recording quality are much higher with files done in higher bit rate and sampling frequencies such as PCM 24bit/48 kHz or higher, and DSD 128 and higher.
Try some here and you will know what I am saying:
HDtracks is a high-resolution music platform for music lovers to download their favorite tracks in master studio quality. Join us today for the ultimate listening experience!
www.hdtracks.com
I tried to emphasize the importance of this point so I started a thread long time ago, hoping that people will share their favorite music source that they know have good recording quality.
The last time I updated the recommended list, there were 128 titles.
I'm pulling down the free super-master-FLAC-things Linn is giving away again for Chrismas... but the dyanmic range (avg to peak) has been 7-11db. Most of the 80s and early 90s CD's are 12-14db, and my good classicals are 14-17db. No point getting all high-format quality if you don't use the range.
forums.audioholics.com
One issue is, the Denon AVR-X4500H is limited to DSD 128 and PCM 24/192, so many of the high resolution files you can buy from places like hdtracks.com will not play.
My recommendations is, if you are really serious on the best possible sounding music for you system, buy a DAC that can play the highest resolutions you can buy in PCM and DSD and forget about the USB input and external hard drives or USB sticks. Then spend a fortune (like I have done) on the high resolution digital files, and never look back to Tidal, Amazon HD kind of stuff to avoid the monthly fees.
I am not saying high resolution files are all good, in fact I believe CD resolution, i.e. 16/44.1 is all you need, but I believe chances are better that the recordings would be of high quality in high resolution digital files available for purchase from places such as hdtracks.