Reddit Reddit reviews Monoprice 6inch RCA Female to 2-RCA Male Digital Coaxial Splitter Adapter

We found 5 Reddit comments about Monoprice 6inch RCA Female to 2-RCA Male Digital Coaxial Splitter Adapter. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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Monoprice 6inch RCA Female to 2-RCA Male Digital Coaxial Splitter Adapter
This Digital Coax Cable is made from premium quality RG-6/U with double copper braid shieldingThis cable is ideal for conducting S/PDIF digital audio signals and other high-bandwidth contentit can also be used for composite video and other line level RCA signals
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5 Reddit comments about Monoprice 6inch RCA Female to 2-RCA Male Digital Coaxial Splitter Adapter:

u/domaindetente · 3 pointsr/edrums

I did the same with a used Traynor Block12 and a Polk PSW10. Then I used a https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B005KBM160/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o08_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 and https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B003L1AGVS/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o07_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 to connect the two together. As an added bonus I also hook up a microphone and a bass guitar to the Traynor so I get a lot of use out of it.

u/gx1400 · 1 pointr/audiophile

You will want something like this rca splitter in order to split the audio signal to a different amplifier from the signal source, if your signal source is an Audio/Video Receiver (I'm assuming it's a 5.1 home stereo system), hopefully it has an line-level or pre-amp output that you can tie to another amplifier.

Running other speakers in series or parallel will inherently either reduce the power delivered to each speaker, or overdrive your amplifier; neither configuration is recommended unless you know what you're doing.

To be honest, 11 speakers is probably overkill; I get the impression you're maybe younger and trying to make due with what you have, which I understand; but you're probably more at risk of damaging your equipment or creating an awfully tuned/controlled soundstage. It would be better to save up for or build some better speakers; a good pair of tower speakers on craigslist would probably provide better fidelity than 5 or 11 untuned, haphazardly distributed speakers.

Best of luck.

u/Armsc · 1 pointr/hometheater

Just get a splitter I have used this one and it works great.

u/EpisodeOneWasGreat · 1 pointr/audiophile

Some powered subwoofers have RCA audio passthroughs that you can connect directly to powered speakers using boring RCA cables.

Assuming you will be connecting a powered subwoofer that does not have RCA audio pass-throughs, your current setup is probably:
SMSL -> L/R RCA Cable -> Powered Speakers

Your desired setup is probably:

SMSL -> RCA Splitter -> Pair one: (L/R RCA Cable -> Powered Speakers), Pair two: (L/R RCA Cable -> Subwoofer)

Note that some subwoofers may only take one RCA input, in which case many people choose the R channel.

u/shadyinternets · 1 pointr/BudgetAudiophile

yes and no to the active speakers thing. technically you can skip a dac/amp if you went with active speakers, as those have an amp built in and would just use the dac in your macbook for converting. but you would then be running the digital cables (the rca cables) directly to the left/right speakers instead of speaker wire. something you cant do with that particular sub since it doesnt have the digital outs, only analog. the active speakers dont need the speaker wire running to them since they are basically just an amp built inside of a speaker, the analog speaker wire is inside of there already but you dont ever see it or worry about it. you can run rca cables right into them and call it a day, no need to get a separate amp anymore.

so if you were to get active speakers you would either need to get a pair that has a sub out (if those exist...) or you would need to get an rca splitter and then run 1 set to the sub and 1 set to the active speakers and thats it. splitters are pretty cheap luckily https://www.amazon.com/Monoprice-Digital-Coaxial-Splitter-Adapter/dp/B003L1AGVS/ref=sr_1_14 or you could switch to a different sub that has rca input and output, then you could run the active speakers from the subwoofer. so itd be 3.5mm to rca cable to the sub, then 1 rca wire to left active and 1 rca wire to right active. basically at least. i believe some active will have both rca wires into 1 side then there is another cable linking the 2 speakers, but just depends on the brand.


one thing to be aware of is that active speakers can sound quite different than what youre used to with a passive one. the active speakers people use for computer setups are usually Near Field monitors, meaning they are meant to be listened to up close and wont fill a larger room with sound very well. depending on how much space you will have where theyre at, that could be good or bad. and they will also often sound very "analytical" compared to passive, meaning the music will sound sort of boring compared to a normal bookshelf passive speaker. that is because typically near field monitors are used for music producing/mixing/whatever where you want to hear the music as close to how it came out of the instruments without being changed by a dac, amp or crossovers. its like having the equalizer on your stereo set to flat across the whole thing vs tweaking things for that V curve most people enjoy. possibly you can just adjust the eq in itunes or whatever other music program (hopefully using a better one since itunes is 100% crap!) to get closer to the sound you like though. just something to take into consideration.

personally i dont like active speakers, i tried a few but just couldnt get them to sound how i wanted in my space. so i stuck with my old passive ones that are perfect for me. and with a separate dac/amp/speakers it allows you to customize things much more and also you can upgrade and replace things 1 at a time. if my dac goes out, i replace just the dac, if my amp dies i replace just the amp. with active stuff its built in so not as easy to simply swap things out when you want to.