I have a 4 way active speaker system. I would like to split the amps and processing into two identical racks, so that this will actually turn into two huge active speakers - and I would like to get rid of the line level link between them and turn it into wireless.
As it is now, there are two independent 4 way DSPs with identical settings fed from a line level analog source (mostly BT receiver, but I want to be able to use an LP player as well).
One of the options using existing components would be to use two Bluetooth TWS boards - are there any options to this?
The other would be to use Ethernet interconnected DSPs - like Symetrix, Qsys, etc. - I could hide the Ethernet cable into the wall and provide sockets on the wall next to the power sockets. I would not do this with a line level cable.
I have a NUC PC ready with Linux and Camilla DSP to be able to use FIR processing. It works fine with one multichannel USB soundcard. Is there a way to make a setup where the NUC would be the master DSP and then send the processed audio channels (8 or 10 in total) to two slave devices, each running its own soundcard over Ethernet in a synchronized manner? Or having one master as streamer only and then two identical PCs with identical CamillaDSP setups receiving synchronized data?
Or any other way that would distribute the 10 channels over Ethernet from the central source/DSP into two places.
All of this is a "nice to have". Worst case, I can do it the traditional way with a single central rack (behind one of the speakers) and run multicore speaker level signal in a single cable to each speaker from the rack. Basically, I would like to know if any of the above is possible or not.
As it is now, there are two independent 4 way DSPs with identical settings fed from a line level analog source (mostly BT receiver, but I want to be able to use an LP player as well).
One of the options using existing components would be to use two Bluetooth TWS boards - are there any options to this?
The other would be to use Ethernet interconnected DSPs - like Symetrix, Qsys, etc. - I could hide the Ethernet cable into the wall and provide sockets on the wall next to the power sockets. I would not do this with a line level cable.
I have a NUC PC ready with Linux and Camilla DSP to be able to use FIR processing. It works fine with one multichannel USB soundcard. Is there a way to make a setup where the NUC would be the master DSP and then send the processed audio channels (8 or 10 in total) to two slave devices, each running its own soundcard over Ethernet in a synchronized manner? Or having one master as streamer only and then two identical PCs with identical CamillaDSP setups receiving synchronized data?
Or any other way that would distribute the 10 channels over Ethernet from the central source/DSP into two places.
All of this is a "nice to have". Worst case, I can do it the traditional way with a single central rack (behind one of the speakers) and run multicore speaker level signal in a single cable to each speaker from the rack. Basically, I would like to know if any of the above is possible or not.
Take a look at Wisa for wireless (here is a receiver module with DSP, for example https://www.profusionplc.com/parts/sws997sd-rx-module), or Dante or aes67 modules for wired.
This will give you the multichannel digital transport with i2s output. Then you need the i2s to analog for the speakers themselves.
This will give you the multichannel digital transport with i2s output. Then you need the i2s to analog for the speakers themselves.