Soundbar connection

Hi-Fi newbie

Active member
Nov 21, 2024
3
1
25
Visit site
Hi šŸ‘‹šŸ»
Iā€™m looking for some help please.
I have an old Philips CDR 802 CD player/recorder that Iā€™d like to connect to a soundbar or speakers. I have no amp as the old Technics Hi-Fi system I used to use, no longer works.

Is it possible to connect directly to a soundbar/speakers? The CD player has the following connections:
Optical In
Digital In/Out
Analog L/R, In/Out

Iā€™d really appreciate your help/advice.
Thank you ā˜ŗļø
Matt.
 

Hi-Fi newbie

Active member
Nov 21, 2024
3
1
25
Visit site
Ah, so I havenā€™t actually bought one yet as I didnā€™t know whether itā€™d be possibleā€¦ Could you please advise me as to what inputs the soundbar would need to have? Thank you for your reply and the good news, itā€™s very much appreciated šŸ‘šŸ»
 
  • Like
Reactions: Gray

Witterings

Well-known member
If you've not bought yet you might want to think about what other uses you may have for either the soundbar or speakers ... whichever you buy, i.e. TV input or will you ever add a streamer to it?
The fact you're asking about attaching a CD player says you probably want it for music as opposed to TV in which case as a rule of thumb speakers will probably sound better than a soundbar.
Your outputs are coaxial and analogue L/R (commonly called RCA) so you need speakers / soundbar that has one of those inputs and then appropriate leads.
The fact you mention soundbar infers you want smaller so probably active bookshelf speakers may suit better than a seperate amp and speakers, a starting point may be a pair of Q Acoustic M20's but you can go from there to speanding 10's of thousands of pounds.

A budget would help and also room size and do you see this as a start of a HiFi journey in which case recommendations at this stage could be very different t save buying again on the future.
 

Hi-Fi newbie

Active member
Nov 21, 2024
3
1
25
Visit site
Thank you for your reply. I wonā€™t be looking to add a TV or streamer, perhaps only my PC which is where I have additional music stored digitally. Yes the aim is to have smaller equipment, Iā€™ve not heard of active bookshelf speakers before so I will have a look at those. Just had a very quick look on-line & prices are fine, would be happy to spend up to Ā£500 maybe. The room theyā€™ll be situated in is 2.6m x 3.6m. I donā€™t see it being a Hi-Fi journey, would just like a decent sound, doesnā€™t have to be amazing. The speakers I used originally were part of a standard Techincs Hi-Fi system but one of the ā€˜cones?ā€™ has torn. Thank you very much.
 

Witterings

Well-known member
I've not heard them but I'm quite a fan of Elac speakres and have a pair of their B 5.2's in my kitchn living room, these may be worth a look at

Add a WiiM mini streamer for Ā£89 (probably less on Black Friday) and you can play the digital music on your PC using a mobile phone / tablet as a remote control from the comfort of your armchair :D
 

Gray

Well-known member
You've got a fair choice of powered speakers Matt.
In your position I'd be looking at the Adam T5 model*, sold singularly, but a pair will (currently) cost you Ā£260.....because it does what you want, without including things you don't really need.
Trouble with many powered speakers, is that their own volume controls can be inconveniently placed - because they're not intended for frequent adjustment, rather for level presetting, with something upstream doing the volume controlling.
In the case of the Adam, there's a control on each cabinet - making things worse.
A passive volume control could be your answer - but you need to give it some consideration.
* Member Jason @Jasonovich is an Adam fan / owner - he'll probably explain why you should get them ;)

An alternative would be a small amp feeding a small pair of standard, non-powered (passive) speakers. That opens up your choices even further.

I'm one of those people that might have thought this little thing too cheap to be any good.....till I bought a couple:
It's actually not unlike the sort of amps that are built in to powered speakers anyway.
And its single input would take your CD player - an input expander (simple switcher) could be used if necessary in the future.
It could give you more conveniently located control of your volume - as well as allowing for a choice of speakers.

Either way, as @Witterings rightly suggested - a pair of speakers will be better than a soundbar for your CD player (although a torn cone is another reason to forget any idea of using your Technics ones) (y)
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Hi-Fi newbie

TRENDING THREADS

Latest posts