

🔗 Unlock your HDMI’s full audio potential—because your setup deserves premium sound.
The J-Tech Digital Aode HDMI Audio Extractor converts HDMI input audio into either 2-channel analog stereo or 5.1-channel digital output, supporting up to 1080p video resolution with 12-bit deep color and HDCP compliance. Featuring flexible EDID audio modes and plug-and-play ease, it’s compatible with Apple TV, Blu-ray players, and more, delivering versatile, high-quality audio extraction for professional and home entertainment setups.











| ASIN | B00BIQER0E |
| Best Sellers Rank | #87,340 in Electronics ( See Top 100 in Electronics ) #110 in Digital-Analog Converters |
| Item model number | JTDAT5CH |
| Manufacturer | J-Tech Digital |
| Product Dimensions | 8.38 x 6.6 x 2.03 cm; 0.28 g |
B**I
Everything nicely work as describing by j teck.
A**D
Cumple su función, tal como descrito.
C**Y
Been trying to get my PC and my vintage Marantz 1060 amp and Acoustic Research AR-12 speakers to play nice together and this J-tech box finally did the trick. I've got a HP OMEN 30L PC that I dumped Windows and installed Ubuntu on. Turns out the onboard sound is a nightmare to configure without the Windows driver (no specific driver for Linux, of course). I didn't want to buy a new sound card and hassle with it fitting in the case and being compatible etc., so I decided to try to configure the HDMI audio from my RTX 3060 ti graphics card instead. I could get it to work through my TV, but I didn't want to always have to have the TV turned on just to get sound from my PC, and also the sound quality for music was mediocre. Finally after about a week, I found this J-Tech box and decided to give it a shot at the price without expecting much. Got it about three hours ago, plugged hdmi from my GPU into it, hdmi out to my monitor, RCA plugs to aux on my Marantz amp, set J-Tech box to 2-Ch, plugged it in and waddya know-- awesome sound! I'm really impressed by how clean the sound is for music. Great instrument separation, not muddy in the mids like most TV audio outputs, and whisper quiet (no AC buzz) when nothing is playing. Also, it doesn't "color" the sound with weird bass boost or EQ settings like so many sound boxes do. It sounds almost as good now playing a Youtube music video as playing a record on my mid-range ADC turntable & cartridge. As for video quality, it looks exactly the same to me as before I put the box in the path. Highly recommended if you are rocking a vintage audio gear setup and/or have weird driver issues or bad onboard sound from your PC.
P**Y
I'm using this device to get TV Audio to my SONOS PLAYBAR, and my review focuses on this application. Many folks have written about problems in getting Dolby Digital or ANY sound from their TV when connecting the TV's optical out to the PLAYBAR. Some TV's have no optical out, some have no sound from their optical out when using an HDMI source, and some others send only stereo to the optical out. See this link for a list of TVs and their level of Playbar compatibility: sonos.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/1931/~/television-compatibility-with-the-playbar A very simple, fairly inexpensive solution to such problems when setting up a Playbar, and one which has been working extremely well for me, is this J-Tech HDMI Audio extractor combined with a vanilla hdmi switch. (monoprice has a 4x1 hdmi switch for $24 OR an 8x1 switch for $79, and amazon has some good alternatives as well), Note that this solution will work even for TVs which are said to be incompatible at the Sonos link above, including those for which Sonos says there's no workaround. My TV is one of those. It's a pioneer elite, and I've yet to find one I'd want to replace it with. But my Sonos, Elite and JTech are working perfectly together, since an HDMI audio extractor (such as this JTech) completely eliminates the need for the TV's digital audio output port. This solution is ideal for folks, like myself, who are already using an HDMI switch or an hdmi switching AV Receiver (in these cases you'd only need to buy this J-Tech extractor), but even if you have to buy an HMDI switch, this approach has some advantages over an integrated hdmi/optical switch: It works for sources that have no digital audio output ports (ie, for sources that send audio only thru their hdmi ports, such as the Roku3); It's easier to find a switch handling ANY number of sources or matrix switching; It's less expensive; And you need to run only 1 cable (just an hdmi cable) from your equipment location to the TV location. Also note that, using a standalone switch, rather than TV switching, makes it much easier to add more sources at any time in the future, especially when you have cables behind walls or under the floor, or when you want to add more sources than the TV can handle. Here's how you set it up: - Plug your switcher's HDMI-out cable into the JTech's HDMI-in port (instead of the TV). - Connect a second HDMI cable from the JTech's HDMI-out to your TV's HMDI-in. - Connect the JTech's optical out to the Playbar. - Choose Digital Out on the JTech and you're done. (You'd locate the JTech near the TV and Playbar, avoiding the need to run the optical cable from the switch, or equipment location, to the tv location) I'm getting dolby digital whenever my source has dolby digital, and stereo whenever my source has stereo. My picture quality and audio are excellent, and video audio sync is perfect. No problems of any kind. (Note however that, as with every other device I've seen, this unit does not convert dolby digital plus to either vanilla DD or to stereo for the digital out. If you're getting DD+ you'd have to switch that off at the source. An example of this is Netflix whose surround sound is DD+ on Roku. Because of that, I have Roku set up to give me stereo from Netflix and DD 5.1 from Amazon. ) Hope this helps
T**N
Chegou tudo certinho. Excelente vendedor.
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