If I understand you correctly, you want to supply a 2nd system with files you have on a drive in another system without any physical, or electronic connections. There's probably several ways you can do this but I have a fairly simple solution that may work for you. 1 and 2 TB hard drives are very cheap. You really need to back up anyway so why not get a 2nd HD for use in your 2nd system. It can be your backup and your file source for the other system. Or maybe I didn't get what you are asking? Wouldn't be the first time I messed up a post.
Music on NAS-Recommendations to play on HIFI
I have nearly a terabyte of music (in many formats) on a PC based NAS that I would like to listen to on my Audio System. Each system (PC, Audio) is physically close but electrically separate, and I want to keep it that way.
Here's what I've tried in the past:
1. Soundblaster audio output to preamp input. The sound was pretty good but there was the potential for ground loop hum to develop as both systems (PC and Audio) were on their own dedicated branch circuits. Absolute downside was that the PC's cooling fans were audible. I disconnected this arrangement because my audio preamp would go into a muted protection mode whenever my PC re-booted. The protection mode would occur regardless of what input was selected on the preamp. Not sure what happens when the PC reboots to elicit this protection mode, but for this reason I would like to keep the PC electrically isolated from the audio preamp.
2. Wireless Music Bridge. This method was pretty safe but the Linksys Wireless Music Bridge didn't have the greatest audio quality.
I could leave the noisy PC tower off and use a quiet laptop on my home network to access the NAS and play the files using the laptop's media player. A driver was installed on the laptop adding the wireless music bridge to the list of output devices (PC Speakers/SPDIF/Wireless Music Bridge). Everything was handled wirelessly over the network keeping my PC and Audio systems electrically separate but the overall sound depended on the quality of the Wireless Music Bridge.
So how do people do it? I have all this music stored on a NAS that I'd like to play through a decent DAC while keeping the two systems electrically separate. Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Here's what I've tried in the past:
1. Soundblaster audio output to preamp input. The sound was pretty good but there was the potential for ground loop hum to develop as both systems (PC and Audio) were on their own dedicated branch circuits. Absolute downside was that the PC's cooling fans were audible. I disconnected this arrangement because my audio preamp would go into a muted protection mode whenever my PC re-booted. The protection mode would occur regardless of what input was selected on the preamp. Not sure what happens when the PC reboots to elicit this protection mode, but for this reason I would like to keep the PC electrically isolated from the audio preamp.
2. Wireless Music Bridge. This method was pretty safe but the Linksys Wireless Music Bridge didn't have the greatest audio quality.
I could leave the noisy PC tower off and use a quiet laptop on my home network to access the NAS and play the files using the laptop's media player. A driver was installed on the laptop adding the wireless music bridge to the list of output devices (PC Speakers/SPDIF/Wireless Music Bridge). Everything was handled wirelessly over the network keeping my PC and Audio systems electrically separate but the overall sound depended on the quality of the Wireless Music Bridge.
So how do people do it? I have all this music stored on a NAS that I'd like to play through a decent DAC while keeping the two systems electrically separate. Any suggestions would be appreciated.
- ...
- 4 posts total
- 4 posts total