Forester wrote:
If I do buy a new one, I would prefer to have phono out because I have
no plans to upgrade my amplifier for the sake of the TV box. Are there
differences between the boxes? I'm thinking of getting another
Philips, but only if the sound quality is better.
The Philips DTR1500 (£70):
http://www.unbeatable.co.uk/CatalogueItem_14143.html
came out top in one of the hi-fi mag's Freeview receivers test, and it
has both digital and phono analogue outputs. But if you want the best
audio quality then you're best using the digital output, as other people
have said, because this avoids the analogue phono outputs. Probably best
just to get one of the above Philips boxes and see if you think it's
good enough via the phonos. If it's not then you're virtually guaranteed
to improve the audio quality if you send the digital output to a DAC or
a decent AV amp.
The other point you were asking about was the different quality of the
stations on Freeview. This is primarily down to the bit rate level
they're transmitted at, see this table to compa
http://www.digitalradiotech.co.uk/in...bit_rate_table
As you can see, the commercial music stations that sound bad use
128kbps, whereas Radios 1-4 use 192kbps and 6 Music, 1Xtra and BBC7 use
160kbps. Not perfect, but good. However, I agree with Tony that for
Radio 3 you'd be better off with an FM tuner and a decent aerial
installation. This is the best entry level FM tuner:
http://www.richersounds.com/index.ph...l.php&p=201138
and there's a recording of Radio 3 using that tuner he
http://69.57.180.10/~digital/R3_FM.mp3 (2.3 MB)
http://69.57.180.10/~digital/radio3_fm.mp3 (7.4 MB)
or if you can decode AAC or FLAC then the latter file is also available
in these formats:
http://69.57.180.10/~digital/radio3_fm.mp4 (6.9 MB)
http://69.57.180.10/~digital/radio3_fm.flac (16.2 MB)
--
Steve -
www.digitalradiotech.co.uk - Digital Radio News & Info
DAB sounds worse than FM, Freeview, digital satellite, cable and
broadband internet radio