Current slide {CURRENT_SLIDE} of {TOTAL_SLIDES}- Best Selling in Audio Cables & Interconnects
Current slide {CURRENT_SLIDE} of {TOTAL_SLIDES}- Save on Audio Cables & Interconnects
Meyrou who streaming device would not work properly through this item. I'm not saying that it wouldn't work but what I'm saying is the remote control and the interface would not cooperate. The same problem with my Amazon fire stick as well. I went out and bought a new receiver so I wouldn't have to use the optical connection. I thought I would give this a try before I spent money on an AC receiver that had all the HDMI inputs I needed. My DVD player and direct TV box worked okay
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New
I'm not 100% dissatisfied with this product, only partially. Solid construction and easy installation. The biggest problem is the unit constantly resets itself every 5 minutes or so, leaving a gap in the playback audio and sometimes, more rarely, the video. If you can put up with that, this is your convertor...if not, you should invest in an HDMI receiver.
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New
Product works....but not well. The product seems to be causing lagging in the signal. At many times throughout the night the sound stopped dead, and needed time to catch up. So, the product works, but doesn't perform the way I need it to. It will work in the mean time while I find a better product to replace it with. If i knew ahead of time I would not have purchased. At most this is worth $6 and not a penny more.
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New
This works well, and includes a true 2.0ch EDID option for us old-school stereo enthusiasts (some other extractor products advertise this feature but actually lack it). Also convenient: I found that the HDMI connection provided enough juice by itself that the supplied power adapter wasn't necessary. A coaxial S/PDIF output, in addition to or instead of the optical jack, would be an improvement. The reason is that some D/A converter devices can lock onto high-resolution signals only via a wired connection, not via optical. To feed my Bryston BDA-1 DAC the 176khz and 192khz signals produced by my blu-ray player, I needed to add a toslink-to-coax converter box.
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New
Hooked up with 2 good quality hdmi cables, using rca (red and white) out to strereo, and got nothing but "ticking" noise.
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New