appleTV audio out to old amp with only analog audio

I'm thinking about getting the Apple TV for both video and for playing my music on my home stereo system. I currently have an old amp with only analog audio capabilities, but the new ATV looks like it only supports digital optical out, and the digital to analog converters I've looked for seem pretty expensive. How can I get the audio from my music collection (iTunes) to play wirelessly through ATV through my amp?

I currently also have an Airport Express which I use for audio, but I was thinking of selling that and just using the ATV since the ATV can essentially do the same thing as the AX with added video benefit. I've seen some threads on streaming audio from the ATV to the AX, but do I really need both? Seems like there should be another way.

I was thinking of connecting the ATV to my TV via HDMI cable for audio, and then using an analog audio out from the TV to my amp. But, if I'm correct, that would only provide me with sound coming from the TV. It wouldn't give sound out from iTunes, for example. Is that right?

Are there any other options?

MacBook, Mac OS X (10.5.8)

Posted on Oct 10, 2010 8:48 PM

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13 replies

Oct 11, 2010 2:26 AM in response to Seri0usFun

All you need is a DAC between Apple TV (Toslink digital audio output) to your stereo amplifier (RCA analog L/R line inputs). DAC come in various prices and grades, you can always pick one to suite your budget and sound requirement (search in eBay with key word "DAC"). There are reasonably good models priced below USD 200 such as Sparrow offered by Audio-GD (www.audio-gd.com) though it is designed and built in China.

Using HDMI and analog cables to pass digital audio signal through decoder and amplifier built in your TV set probably will work but I doubt it will give satisfactory sound quality for music appreciation. Bare in mind that decoder/amplifier built in TV set must be cheap enough for competitive price in mass consumer market (they are not built for quality sound). So the scenario become output from cheap amplifier cascaded into expensive external amplifier and it will never sound good no matter how good is the external amplifier. Moreover your TV set must be remain on even when you only want to listen to music.

Oct 11, 2010 7:07 PM in response to Seri0usFun

For an interim solution use HDMI (audio and Video combined) to your TV, then use the audio out jacks on the TV to connect to your stero system.

You won't get true dolby but then you didn't have it before since true dolby only truely works on optical. You will not likely be able to tell the difference if you have simulated dolby.

I actually found this to be an easier set up for the non-techie members of the family who can't remember what all the device settings are, then I jut set it to optical when I watch it.

Feb 8, 2012 12:08 PM in response to Seri0usFun

I have three Airport Expresses just for this purpose, playing audio on different systems in different rooms. The Express has both toslink and analog outputs in the same jack (which I find ingenious) so you can have either, if you get the special toslink/analog cable kit from Apple.


I don't know why they did not fit the ATV2 with the same configuration as the Airport Express. It would let you connect the TV via HDMI and an analog source with the jack. If you're just going to use it for audio, stick with the Express.


BTW check with Parts Express if you want to get a DAC. They have a buch of options.


Good Luck!

Dec 3, 2012 6:58 PM in response to Seri0usFun

Followings are my observations in audio streaming with Apple TV 3 and Airport Express through AirPlay protocol:


-- Apple TV 3 come with only digital audio outputs through HDMI and optical SPDIF outputs. If you connect optical link from the optical output to optical input of any DAC and HDMI cable from the HDMI output to HDMI input on TV set, audio output will be transmitted through both digital outputs. Thus is is not necessary to turn on TV set unless visual feedback is required. There is no audio analog line output for Apple TV 3.


-- AirportExpress come with single combo mini jack (digital + analog) for audio output regardless of old/new models. You can connect either digital optical link (with Mini/Toslink adaptor) to digital input of DAC or analog line cable (inferior) to analog line input of amplifier. When analog line is used, digital-to-analog conversion is done by DAC built into AirportExpress for which do not expect quality is as good as most external DAC models. What do you expect from a single-chip DAC implementation vs standalone DAC models cost few thousand dollars ? Moreover analog line is susceptible to interference more than digital line.


So the decision to use Apple TV or AirportExpress, analog or digital transmission for audio streaming depends on whether you need WiFi base station features of AirportExpress to establish wireless network and quality of your audio system to justify all-digital audio transmission. Followings are what I use in audio streaming from iMac/iPad mini /iPhone 5 to audio system in living room. Quality of audio output is comparable with Sonos Zone Player as audio source.


Apple AirPort Extreme wireless base station (802.11n, 5GHz)

Apple TV 3 (firmware 5.1.1, Xtreme HD Toslink optical cable)

Antelope Audio Zodiac DAC

Bel Canto power amplifier

Bowers & Wilkins 683 speakers

Yamaha YST-SW215 subwoofer

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appleTV audio out to old amp with only analog audio

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