Acoustic Research Optical (Toslink) Cable Speaker Cables

Acoustic Research Optical (Toslink) Cable Speaker Cables 

DESCRIPTION

Interconnect cable for audio/video equipment with digital input and output jacks.

USER REVIEWS

Showing 1-10 of 26  
[Sep 14, 2006]
mccalley
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Good price, seems like solid construction. I rewire my system about once every two months as I am constantly changing, adding and deleting components. Some of these cables have been abused a little and I have yet to have one fail. There are currently five in use (HD TiVo, DVD, Media PC, Xbox360, Xbox).

Fibre optics won't contribute to grounding problems.

Weakness:

I would say that the coaxial version (with RCA connectors) of SPDIF is probably slightly less prone to accidental disconnection. I don't have this problem, but some people have to pull components out of shelves and are reaching behind and tugging on cables that may be intertwined. The connector on the optical version of SPDIF is just not very robust.

Take it from an engineer, here are a few points:

- It is not very likely video would be effected by an SPDIF cable. There is the possibility of noise and issues related to grounding coming across a copper cable. There is also the possibility that the circuit components that handle those interfaces generate noise on the board or within the same system that decodes the digital signal, so it depends on your system.

- Digital is digital is digital. Whether it comes over optical or copper, has gold or platinum connectors, the word "Monster" printed on it or whatever, it is exactly the same signal and can be measured as such. If the cable is long enough or bad enough, bit error can occur. This would sound clearly like a problem and not some slight degradation of sound quality.

- There are different digital formats and rates of data transfer. These can make a difference. Generally, the higher data rate, the more depth and separation in the audio. With some poking through menus on your source and possibly on your receiver you should be able to identify if you are using PCM, DD, DTS or AC3 at 48 or 96kbps. Ideally, you would be transferring raw data from your source to your receiver, where presumably you would have the best decoder.

- Assuming you have a good source (DVD and Super Audio isn’t bad), sound is most likely to be compromised first in the decoder, then with noise creeping in before amplification, then in poor amplification, some in transmission (picture wasted $$ on 1” thick Monster cable – 8 gauge copper should be sufficient), some in the crossover circuitry and then, of course, the quality of the speaker. Lots of places to compromise sound and at each stop there are several levels of quality…all of come after the digital transmission part and begin with decoding. Cables should be last on the list for improving sound.

Similar Products Used:

All kinds of cables, all kinds of connectors, from telecom to IT to AV.

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Jul 08, 2003]
woofus
Casual Listener

Strength:

relatively cheap much better sounding than the in the box cables

Weakness:

none that I can think of, but I also haven't used any other toslinks

I am only a casual listener who is just starting into this crazy hi-fi world, but like this cable a lot. I use it on my PS2, and it is a lot better than the in the box A/V cables. I tried to test it against my sony DVD player which uses a coax cable, it didn't sound as good, but then again it is a new player and is far superior in picture as well. Still it was a bargain compared to monster toslinks, and it inproved my gaming sound a lot. Kenwood 6050 reciever (only 1 optical input) Sony Dvp-ns325 DVD/CD/MP3 Bose 301 IV (not bad, but have Wharfedales in mail)

Similar Products Used:

monster coax

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
5
[Sep 08, 2002]
casey_love
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Price

Weakness:

Sonic abilities

I recently upgraded to a NAD S500 CD player with optical link and off went my Chord Optichord from my DVD home theatre set up. I replaced the DVD toslink with ARs and frankly the AR is not at par with Chord's. I also tested it on the NAD CD and noticed the same. AR's sonic abilities is inferior to the Chord's and Kiri Tekanawa just does not sound as good as when I use my Chord. Having said all this, the AR cable is good enough for DVD and I would stick to the Chord optichord on my NAD. PIONEER 895TX A/V Receiver Pioneer DV-533 DVD Player B&W 602 S3 front B&W 601 S3 surround Yamaha YST305 active sub Tannoy MXc Center NAD C270 Power Amp NAD S500 CD Player

Similar Products Used:

Chord Optichord

OVERALL
RATING
3
VALUE
RATING
5
[Sep 07, 2002]
Sanlyn
AudioPhile

Strength:

Good soundstage, clarity, detail, no harshness, well-defined bass

Weakness:

Bass too lean, slight midrange hardness on some systems. not enough low-end heft.

Have seen remarks here that "all optical cables sound alike" because "they all transmit 0's and 1's," etc. That's true, but it's also true that coax transmits the same 0's and 1's. Coax cables sound different, and so do opticals. It's not digits, folks, it's the materials used, echoes, resonance, impedance matching, clock timing/jitter, etc., etc. These AR's do have a cleaner, clearer, more detailed sound than their more expensive Monster Lightspeed counterparts (which are generally awful). Considering the price, this AR cable is quite good; a clean high end, nice midrange, very decent soundstage in width and depth. There are rave reviews here for these AR's - I can't justify a 4 or 5 rating here. On high end equipment, they sound clean but too lean, the very low end being detailed and tight but not as 'there' as the rest of the spectrum. A (very) mild hardness in the upper midrange, especially on female voices. The lead-in of instrumental attack is a little sloppy (piano, drums, guitar, etc.), often making some piano keys sound as if they need to be screwed down tighter or something. On lesser audio systems (Best Buy, Circuit City, etc.) the AR's did acquit themselves quite well. Give them a 4 in cheapo systems, but with mid-fi or higher their faults become amplified. Still, at $35 they present a good, well-focused soundstage and sounded mighty nice on my older (cheapo) system, which typically had bloated bass and wiry highs that this cable handled well. For high-end gear, unfortunately, they won't do. I have to add points to the AR's overall rating, however, because of their very good DVD picture playback. In that respect, the AR's were far superior in DVD playback to the over-priced junk being sold by Monster nowadays. On my audio system I have better, pricier cables, but these AR's have found a permanent home on my Toshiba DVD video player.

Similar Products Used:

Monster Lightspeed L100 (yuch!) BetterCables Premium Optical (Toslink) Kimber Illuminations DV-75 Coax

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
3
[Jun 09, 2002]
adrian rorvik
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Refined grunt, great in stereo, S.DIRECT feature and SRS CS 5.1., Price!

Weakness:

remote! Not as easy to navigate as other products.

Marantz SR6200 AV Receiver I have read the reviews on this site and elsewhere and pretty much agree, but there are a few things others haven't mentioned. Firstly the thing is a dog to operate. I previously owned a Denon 3801. What a difference when it came to operation! The Denon was a pleasure, with a great remote. One didn't have to bring up the on screen display to change settings (it was displayed on the amp), the signal wasn't muted and the whole thing was a lot more intuitive. With the Marantz the rear centre channel seems an afterthought since distance cannot be set and there is no subwoofer level adjust on the terrible remote.Also no adjustments (i.e Balance) in stereo mode. I, for a long time, felt the Marantz was blown away in movie performance by the Denon, but the new Denon 3802 costs nearly twice as much as the Marantz in South Africa. Please note I said WAS. Recently I rewired my speakers via the sub, set the setup to no sub and use the S. Direct feature. Do yourself a big favour and try this. In stereo it adds dimension and clarity and in home theatre use it is like removing a veil. You simply HAVE to try this otherwise you're not hearing what this receiver can do. The SR6200 is great value for money in my part of the world.It certainly is THE receiver for anyone wanting the best of both worlds- control and power in movie mode and great sounding stereo.Another big plus is the SRS Labs CS5.1 which puts even Dolby Prologic 2 in the shade. No contest there.Bear in mind that the only difference between the SR6200 and the more expensive SR7200 is 192khz decoding, multi-room and a better remote. System includes; Paradigm monitor 3's; p front and rear, Paradigm CC350, B&W ASW1000 sub, Marantz 6000OSEKI cd player, sony DVD, MOnster and AR cables

Similar Products Used:

Yamaha DSP?, Sherwood 8090RDS, Denon 3801

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
5
[Apr 12, 2002]
red-n22
Audio Enthusiast

Acoustic Research makes great cables... I have over $400 CND worth of AR cables running my Home Theater... The sound great... For those of you who complain about the packaging... I agree with you, it is a pain in the butt... But relax guys!!! All you need are scissors, cut 3 sides of the package, and then it''ll open up like a book! I am so pissed off at some people who will not even buy this product, JUST BECAUSE OF THE WAY IT''S PACKAGED?!?!?! I just don''t understand them! Anyways, yeah... great cables!!! JVC 36 D-Series TV Harman Kardon AVR 520 Receiver JVC DVD Player Polk Audio RT800i Towers Polk Audio CS245i Center Polk Audio f/x300 Surrounds Polk Audio PSW250 Subwoofer Acoustic Research Wires & Cables

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Mar 23, 2002]
prepdave
AudioPhile

Strength:

clarity, imaging and value

Weakness:

none

This is an outstanding toslink cable. I use DH Labs D-75 coaxial($69/m) for my music listening, but when I switch to the AR the difference is very minimal. I''m sure most listeners would not be able to tell the difference. Excellent cable, excellent value.

Similar Products Used:

DH Labs D-75, Monster Optical 200, Monster Digilink 300, Sony toslink

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Feb 10, 2002]
Jason
AudioPhile

Strength:

Good build quality, good value, musicality

Weakness:

packaging, which is still minor

I am a former a/v sales person who has sold, installed, and analyzed audio and video equipment. The entire AR line of cables is pretty difficult to beat for the money. You can get these cables at Lowe''s for less than most online companies and not have to wait...

Similar Products Used:

M.I.T., monster, audioquest, vampire, straightwire, etc

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Oct 04, 2001]
Derek
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Build quality, AR name, price vs competitors.

Weakness:

The packaging was a pain to open.

Just bought a 3ft cable to connect my DVD player to my receiver. Sounds considerably better than the RCA cables I was using.

Similar Products Used:

None.

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Dec 03, 2001]
Whisky_211
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Sound quality was better than standard cables

Weakness:

Almost thought I was gonna break them with that package.

I got better sound quality when I used it for my cd-player than the cheaper RCA-type cables I had

OVERALL
RATING
3
VALUE
RATING
4
Showing 1-10 of 26  

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