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SPDIF out put on Mac Studio

Hi

USB C to Optical out adaptor plugged into the Mac Studio

If I go to Sound pref - I can see it listed and I select it

but no sound is coming out


I also have the same thing - but coming in ( use it to record records ) and it works perfectly


I know that the adaptors are either in or out ( not bi directional ) so I made sure I purchased one that said " take your sounds from your Mac/or iPhone and play through your hi fi )


Its driving me mad as I an't see a reason why this would not work


any help would be appreciated thats assuming it's doable !


Cheers


Ray



[Edited by Moderator]

Mac Studio, macOS 14.0

Posted on Nov 5, 2023 3:15 PM

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13 replies

Mar 21, 2024 11:58 PM in response to Loren Ryter

Loren Ryter wrote:

confused in responses. did you find a solution that works and if so what? i am just setting up a mac studio and also want multichannel optical output. (or some kind of digital multichannel audio output at least.) would prefer to retain old receiver with optical input.


The OP didn't say anything about surround sound. I suspect he was looking for optical digital stereo output from his Mac to his stereo receiver.


It sounds like the OP's USB S/PDIF adapter had both coaxial and optical digital ports and a control for choosing which to use. The OP didn't realize that the control was there and needed to be set to the OPTICAL position for there to be audio output on the OPTICAL port.


If you're trying to get surround sound over S/PDIF, that's a completely different problem – and you should start your own thread.

Nov 6, 2023 9:21 AM in response to remixray

I would not jump to the conclusion that it is impossible. More likely, you have a defective USB-to-S/PDIF sound card … either a particular sample that is defective, or one whose design is defective and does not work properly with the Mac. Or perhaps, a defective optical cable. Another card or cable might fix the problem.


In some other threads here, people mentioned HDMI splitters (which extract audio from a HDMI signal and make that audio available on S/PDIF outputs). I don't know how well those work, but thought I'd mention them.


How do I get digital audio out of my new … - Apple Community


Nov 6, 2023 9:32 AM in response to Servant of Cats

Hello Servant of cats


I did think along the same lines

I have 2 S/PDIF converter dongles one out and one in

The one out is running from a Beringer Ultramatch pro , which sends a digital signal from my hifi ( cassette, record, studier reel to reel ) via a optical lead into the dongle - which the Mac receives perfectly and I'm able to make a clean digital recording of the source.


SO I though - is should work the other way ?


so I brought one of these


https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B09QFYNB7Y?psc=1&ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_details


But does not appear to be sending a signal back


so I tried a another device ( Behringer U control UCA202 ) so its connect via USB to the Mac Studio - and it has an optical out , so I tried connecting this, it shows up as a USB Codec - so I select it , and still nothing


I don't really want to give up because I really feel that its purposeful ...


I will look at the links you sent and see what I can find out


It just seems odd that it works one way but not the other


ray


Nov 6, 2023 9:36 AM in response to Grant Bennet-Alder

Your mention of 'Audio MIDI Setup' brought something to mind:


Maybe the OP needs to check the sampling rate in Audio MIDI Setup and make sure that the sampling rate and bit depth are set to something that is compatible with the receiver.


S/PDIF originally appeared in the context of home stereo equipment such as CD players (stereo, 44.1 KHz, 16-bit) and DAT recorders (stereo, 48 KHz, 16-bit samples). There are reports of some implementations going as high as 192 KHz / 24-bit, but it sounds like the original specification was for 48 KHz maximum – with anything above that, one might be risking interoperability problems.


https://forums.stevehoffman.tv/threads/24-192-over-spdif-already-possible.280538/


Nov 6, 2023 9:43 AM in response to remixray

I don't know what to say.


My USB sound card works for me, even though it just has an analog output (in use), an analog input (not in use), and a switch to choose between them.


I don't have any reason to think that a USB sound card could not generate S/PDIF output. I did see that S/PDIF is one-way: there is no communication back from the receiver, to the audio source, to keep things in sync. So jitter is a possibility, though one would hope that an external sound card would pump out fresh samples on the S/PDIF side at a constant rate even if sound data did not always arrive on the USB side at a perfectly steady rate.

SPDIF out put on Mac Studio

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