Can I use the Phonak TV connector in conjuction with my current tv soundbar?
I’m just guessing that most tvs only have one sound output, so would I have to ditch the soundbar and rely solely on the internal tv speakers plus the phonak tv connector?
Can I use the Phonak TV connector in conjuction with my current tv soundbar?
I’m just guessing that most tvs only have one sound output, so would I have to ditch the soundbar and rely solely on the internal tv speakers plus the phonak tv connector?
I have a Samsung QN90C.
I have three sound outputs going.
TV speakers, Bluetooth and sound bar.
The sound bar is connected via toslink.
I can listen to all three at the same time.
OK. This is bit more involved than just “DO THIS, THEN THAT.”
It depends on the source of your video: is it the TV or a separate receiver?
What is the audio input and output on your soundbar?
Back in the day, I used to route the TV audio through a Mac mini. I think there was a TOSLINK port from TV that connects to the Phonak TV Connector box (which streams the audio to your aids across the room, once they are paired + connected). Now I just have my Roger mic connected to a separate receiver that’s connected to our home theatre. I can swap the Roger streamer with the older Phonak TV Connector, so they’re both on a credenza by our TV.
There are a LOT of techie DIYers here, so perhaps if you can fill in some blanks, you’ll get the roadmap to make this work.
Great thanks, that’s what I was curious about
There are splitters (both active and passive which people have used to send audio to both external speakers/system and the TV Connector. They are discussed on the forum somewhere.
WH
@Longhorngary
take a look at this thread :
I have the same setup and have purchesed two different devices for several hundred dollars each and neither worked. I suggest insuring you have a free return policy on anything you try as I think you will be sending the device back. You can purchase an optical splitter and set the LG TV to optical output with one line from the optical splitter going to yoiur Phonak TV connector and the other to the optical input on the sound bar. You lose some functionaly with this approach and need two controllers. If you find a better solution, please post it - there are a lot of us with the same issue.
I share the output from my Sony TV with a Phonak TV Connector and a Bose Soundbar using a 1x2 Toslink Optical splitter cable from Amazon and it’s $17.
Works perfectly…
I use a TOSLINK splitter cable (Amazon) plugged into the back of my Sony TV. One side of the splitter goes to the sound bar (for the family). The other side goes to a cheap Digital Analog Converter (DAC) that I picked up on Amazon, which in turn feeds my Phonak TV connector. The DAC gives me a separate volume control. When I watch TV alone, the sound bar is configured to not come on automatically. It has its own remote.