I have a Macbook 4 and the sound from it is very poor. I have to turn the volume up on the pre-amp (a very simple passive leading into a gainclone), much louder than I do on the DVD player, and there are still no dynamics. Fostex fe126 drivers are less sensitive to the volume and dynamics problem than Pioneer B20s, though their sensitivity are very close so they should be close.
I have looked on the forum for a soulution but do not see an answer. The closest I see is a buffer, but there is not a lot of information . I was thinking that maybe an active preamp with gain would fix the problem, but am not sure.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Ed Robinson
I have looked on the forum for a soulution but do not see an answer. The closest I see is a buffer, but there is not a lot of information . I was thinking that maybe an active preamp with gain would fix the problem, but am not sure.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Ed Robinson
I think most laptop sound outputs are poor, due to close proximity of everything which leads to noise. They also love to use switching supplies to save power (can't really blame them). The best solution is a USB/Firewire external soundcard, or sometimes laptops have S/PDIF outputs in which you could hook up an external DAC.
Mayb takee a different approach.
Check out the Linksys WMB45G. It's a music bridge that enables you to get a digital/analog output via LAN or WLAN (latter requires wireless router). Cheap and Works on Mac too.
After installing the software and configuring the music bridge you tell your audio software and computer hardware to use the bridge as an output and hook up the WMB45G via LAN or WLAN. The WMB45G has analog output (chinch and headphone) and digital output (coax and optical). I run mine into my CD-player's digital input (= DAC).
There is an audio-lag of at least .2 seconds, so it's not suitable for watching movies.
You could also check out the Apple AirPort, which basically does the same for twice the money.
Check out the Linksys WMB45G. It's a music bridge that enables you to get a digital/analog output via LAN or WLAN (latter requires wireless router). Cheap and Works on Mac too.
After installing the software and configuring the music bridge you tell your audio software and computer hardware to use the bridge as an output and hook up the WMB45G via LAN or WLAN. The WMB45G has analog output (chinch and headphone) and digital output (coax and optical). I run mine into my CD-player's digital input (= DAC).
There is an audio-lag of at least .2 seconds, so it's not suitable for watching movies.
You could also check out the Apple AirPort, which basically does the same for twice the money.
I'm pretty sure the MacBook has optical output. http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1562
alleycat said:I'm pretty sure the MacBook has optical output. http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1562
The optical is a line it, not out unfortunately...
Usually it is kind of tricky to get bit-perfect data from the PC and Mac, though it's possible.
Using a streaming client such as airport express or the above mentioned linksys is the better choice.
Anybody tried to tap off I2S from the Linksys? To squezze
most out of these streaming devices quite some people,
swap the clock, improve the ps and run I2S straight to the
DAC.
BUT: Squeezebox etc. don't give you more then 24/48.
Don't know what Linksys is offering here.
Cheers
Using a streaming client such as airport express or the above mentioned linksys is the better choice.
Anybody tried to tap off I2S from the Linksys? To squezze
most out of these streaming devices quite some people,
swap the clock, improve the ps and run I2S straight to the
DAC.
BUT: Squeezebox etc. don't give you more then 24/48.
Don't know what Linksys is offering here.
Cheers
- Status
- This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.
- Home
- Source & Line
- Digital Source
- Poor laptop sound