How to get 4.1 sound out of old tv.

S

spiderman12341

Audiophyte
Hey,

I have a gift for my friend which is a 4.1 sound system. His tv is a Hitachi-P50H401- which was made in 2007. I would be hooking it up vice optical cable.
Link below is a the sound bar.
click below on amazon link to see soundbar model.
amazon 4.1 sound bar made model click here
1739546624237.png

My question is if i plug in optical out to the tv and choice either normal surround or wide surround will 4.1 work? I know the tv is very old 2007 so it's codec may be really old to use. I know that hooking optical out to chromecast will auto configuration 4.1 but will it auto config apps like netflix, crave, amazon prime to 4.1 just out of curiousty? Shold I always use wide surround?
 
-Jim-

-Jim-

Audioholic Field Marshall
I appreciate you giving a Gift to a Friend, so I'll try to assist.

The TV, according to it's Manual (Page 14) will output Dolby Digital (often called AC3) which is a 5.1 lossy signal, and PCM (but no specifications given); so I'll focus on Dolby Digital which is common for the sources you listed. Of course the signal coming into the TV has to be encoded with Dolby Digital for the TV to send it to the soundbar. A lot of program material isn't encoded, or encoded correctly. So don't expect perfection every time.

The information on the soundbar is dismal, but the ray of hope is you "know that hooking optical out to chromecast will auto configuration 4.1". I take that to mean if a Dolby Digital signal is sent to the soundbar, it will automatically decode it.

Selecting wide surround on the TV shouldn't affect what is transmitted via the optical Cable. It just passes through the signal the TV receives from it's input. So provided the sources selected are Dolby Digital, then the soundbar will operate as desired.

I hope this is helpful.
 
S

spiderman12341

Audiophyte
i will try netflix and make sure its set to 5.1 then do a 5.1 test thank you for the help.
 
Last edited:
Antares

Antares

Audioholic Intern
Assuming surround and wide surround work like Prologic did as long as the signal is in stereo it will matrix it into surround.
 
T

Trebdp83

Audioholic Spartan
The linked soundbar does not have a Dolby decoder of any kind and needs to be sent a two channel PCM signal. The TV’s sound output setting and any devices connected to it via HDMI should be set to PCM. The soundbar features DSP to simulate Surround sound from the two channel input signal.
 
-Jim-

-Jim-

Audioholic Field Marshall
The linked soundbar does not have a Dolby decoder of any kind and needs to be sent a two channel PCM signal. The TV’s sound output setting and any devices connected to it via HDMI should be set to PCM. The soundbar features DSP to simulate Surround sound from the two channel input signal.
Can you advise where you found the information on the soundbar?

Thanks.
 
T

Trebdp83

Audioholic Spartan
Assuming the link took me to the correct soundbar, here is the information:
IMG_5515.jpeg


When connected to a system that is not equipped with a Dolby decoder, the audio output setting of the TV would need to be set to PCM as printed in this particular TV’s manual on page 38.

IMG_5516.jpeg


If the linked soundbar is not the correct unit, the correct one will need to be provided by @spiderman12341
 
S

spiderman12341

Audiophyte
if i keep it at stereo audio would there it use ac3 at the same bitrate as the 5.1? I know if I set the tv to surround that if it say aac 2.0 it would downsample but is the downsample to stereo more of a lose then just running stereo on tv?
 
Antares

Antares

Audioholic Intern
if i keep it at stereo audio would there it use ac3 at the same bitrate as the 5.1? I know if I set the tv to surround that if it say aac 2.0 it would downsample but is the downsample to stereo more of a lose then just running stereo on tv?
AAC 2.0 is already stereo.
 
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