

🎶 Elevate your sound game—because your ears deserve the VIP treatment.
The Vantec NBA-200U is a compact USB external audio adapter delivering true 7.1 channel surround sound with high-resolution 48/44.1 kHz playback and recording. Featuring plug-and-play USB 2.0 compatibility, SPDIF optical digital input/output, and separate stereo microphone inputs, it’s designed to upgrade any PC or laptop audio setup with professional-grade clarity and seamless integration.


| ASIN | B004HXGJ3S |
| Best Sellers Rank | #66 in External Sound Cards |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars (961) |
| Date First Available | October 15, 2010 |
| Department | accessories general |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 9.6 ounces |
| Item model number | NBA-200U |
| Manufacturer | Vantec |
| Product Dimensions | 3.94 x 2.28 x 1.02 inches |
D**S
Cheap way to add a SPDIF output to a PC / HTPC - One year of use.
One year in. I use a desktop PC as a Home Theater PC (HTPC) that I have plugged into a Yamaha receiver. I was using a Sound Blaster sound card in it and the results were "ok" but not great - a distinct lack of silence when nothing was playing. The receiver has a built in DAC that is better than that on the sound blaster or the one built into the PC. I plugged this little dude into the USB port and connected it to my receiver with an optical cable and: IT WORKS! I'm using Linux and the operating system recognized the device immediately, as did the receiver. Whether I'm playing audio files or the sound from movies I'm watching from Amazon/Netflix/Hulu/etc, the sound is much better than from the SoundBlaster card or the onboard sound circuit in the PC. The biggest downside is that MP3s may sound worse as you can hear the imperfections of compression, so, if you are ripping CDs, make sure you use a lossless encoder like FLAC. There are much more expensive boards for this, but unless you have a dedicated room and VERY highend equipment on the other side of the cable, this is as good of a device as you need to get sound from a PC into a receiver and you can put your extra money toward other things that would give a greater improvement - like better speakers. My Yamaha has 3 digital inputs, and many others do as well. Using an outboard DAC is the best way to get sound out of a PC as the analog circuits are too exposed to electrical noise from the motherboard and accessories. By allowing (in my case) the receiver, which is designed to be as noiseless as possible, you greatly improve the sound quality. I've also noticed the CPU runs slightly less than with the sound blaster. FINAL NOTE: I would NOT buy this for the analog outputs and only bought this as a test in using a SPDIF to DAC on my receiver. I feel the analog ports are no better than the ports built in to the PC. They might come in handy if I needed to use it with the analog ports on a preamp that didn't have a DAC, AND needed to move it often - but there are probably better devices for that use.
R**.
Great Product!
Using a USB switch to switch between a Mac and a PC. The PC has 5.1 surround speakers. Tried just doing 2.1 from Mac and 5.1 from PC with a 3.5 switch, but there was a quite a bit of line noise. Found this little device and hooked it up it works great. Whenever I switch computers on the USB switch the sound card comes with it. I've not heard any sound anomalies and high and low pitches sound great. The device is old. It doesn't even list Windows 10, let alone Windows 11. However, both the Windows 11 PC and the Mac Pro M4 recognize the device without drivers and output 5.1. Great solution for me.
D**E
7.1 Virtual Surround Sources Work Using Win. 10 PC Optical-Spdif Cable Connection To Old AVR!
Needing clean pro audio to compose music using Reaper & Kontakt on my Win. 10 1903 Desktop PC, I got this USB 2.0 to 7.1 Channel Audio version Adapter due to my old internal Asus 7.1 soundcard causing big pops, a reported issue with all Win. 10 builds. I connected it from the desktop (see 1st pic) to my old Harman-Kardon wired 5.1 1700 AVR Receiver with an Optical-Spdif cable, then carefully followed the 2, below posted installation & setup guides by Amazon Users Jose_49, & GiGNet, respectively. I was initially stumped testing the Virtual Surround via the Win. 10 speaker setup, only getting left & right Stereo playback, until I chose to go online & play a YouTube video; THIS is where I & discovered what GIGNet was trying to explain, that Virtual ("fake") Surround only works with specific Surround sources, but as connected with a Digital Optical-Spdif cable using PCM Pass-Through, you'll only get 2 Stereo channels of "real" sound. So unless you configure any desktop software with surround or multiple outputs, L-R Stereo is all you will get offline. The GOOD NEWS is (depending on your Receiver), connected with Digital Optical-Spdif & using PCM (Pass Through), it CAN play: PCM 2.0, Dolby Digital 2.0 to 5.1, Dolby Digital EX 6.1, DTS Digital Surround, DTS-ES Matrix 6.1, DTS-ES Discrete 6.1, & DTS 96/24 (96kHz/24bit audio). It CANNOT play: 5.1/7.1 multi-channel PCM, Dolby Digital Plus, Dolby TrueHD, Dolby Atmos, DTS-HD Master Audio, DTS:X, or Auro 3D Audio. This is the MAIN thing PC users must get to avoid an exercise in futility, just carefully follow the below pasted Amazon user instructions I've mentioned for Win. 10, connect to your AVR Receiver with an Optical-Spdif cable (see 2nd pic for how I setup my Vantec C-Media Software Panel for PCM Pass Through with NO EFFECTS), & you're good to go! From Jose_49 "Here it goes: 1st. Download Driver From Vantec Site 2nd. Open it and extract its content anywhere, in the case of this example I'm going to open the file and copy and paste the folder "CM6206-1.08(QR)" into my desktop. There will be a bunch of folders in there. 3rd. DO NOT CLICK Setup.exe (I know you did it ! ) 4th. Go to the extracted folder and head into "WIN81(WHQL)", there you will see a "Setup.exe" and "Setup.ex_" file YES, with the underscore at the end. 5th. Rename "Setup.exe" to "Setup.exe_bak" (or whatever) 6th. Rename "Setup.ex_" to "Setup.exe" 7th. Run "Setup.exe" by double clicking or pressing enter. 8th. You will now see the "Installing USB Multi-Channel Audio Device". If it asks you to connect it, connect the device. 9th. Restart your PC. 10th. After restarting on the task bar at the right (system tray) you'll see a blue icon. Double click to configure. 11th. Enjoy! " --------------------------------------------- From GiGNet. "This device works exactly as advertised...if you know what you are doing. They key here is that this device is NOT a Dolby Digital/DTS Decoder. You need an optical connected device than can decode the uncompressed PCM stream. My use case was simple. I needed optical digital PCM pass through to my Logictech Z906 system for watching movies and listening to music in Dolby 5.1 and DTS 5.1. Here is the thing. To make this work you just have to a) set the Vantec software to PCM ON - the rest of the settings are analog related and don't mean anything in this case - Then, Windows 10 just sees the device as digital output via USB - nothing to do there. b) You must set whatever client you are using i.e. VLC, PLEX to NOT transcode the audio rather to pass it through. This is a super important step. If you don't do this you will get what sounds like a weird hybrid of stereo/surround that sounds terrible- remember SPDIF is really just two channels of audio - but when you pass PCM the assumption is that your connected device can decode the PCM stream - in this case Dolby, DTS, etc. Once you have made that settings change in your client the next thing is to make sure whatever movie or music file you are playing is in fact encoded for the expected format - playing a two channel AC3 movie or a stereo MP3 is not going to sound like you'd expect - remember, whatever you send to the SDPIF output it is going to expect to be decoded by the connected device. Story short, all you need to do is make sure your computer is outputting PCM (PCM is uncompressed data) and you will be loving your little Vantec device."
C**L
En connectant le Vantec sur un port USB d'une Shield TV Pro (le nouveau modèle), je pensais pouvoir avoir un son Dolby Digital 5.1 sur la sortie optique. Et bien non ! Stéréo au mieux. Par contre ça fonctionne en le connectant sur le port USB d'un PC sous W10 mais c'est pour moi sans intérêt. Je retournerai donc le produit.
L**O
Lo compre en un inicio para conectar la salida audio óptico de mi Tv a la entrada de audio óptico de la tarjeta Vantec pero no dio señal, probé con otros dispositivos como Xbox one, play 4 y otra computadora con salida optical y estos si daban señal, por lo que deduje que la salida optical de mi tv era la que no servía y la entrada optical de la tarjeta Vantec si. Por lo tanto, estaba a nada de regresarla debido en que no cumplía lo que requería pero me convenció la excelente calidad de sonido que tiene a pesar de ser externa y de bajo costo, la recomiendo.
I**G
Works very well to connect external stereo audio input from a multi-channel mixer, into a computer through a USB port, as well as obtain an audio output from the computer, into an audio system or headphones. Regularly used for Zoom connections in both a church and choir environment, bypassing the poor (or malfunctioning) microphone and speaker in my laptop. No problems so far.
M**W
I like the VANTEC USB external audio adapter, works like a charm, the only complaint I have, I couldn't purchase it locally, had to buy it from the US of A, but only took one week to arrive, that's cool, the price tag is very affordable, They even have a web site for this product should you need support, Oh and it works on Windows 10 32/64 Bit systems. Installation and use worked with out any problems, in 5 mins I was up and running, I'm a happy camper now.
M**Y
I got this for my nvidia shield tv pro and it works well however i thought it comes with the USB cable but unfortunately it doesn't. On the instruction manual, its mentioned it comes with the cable, but its not when i opened the box
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