Need help with pre-out/main-in question


I'm a little confused on the pre-out/main-in thing... I bought a used stereo receiver (NAD 7400) with pre-out/main-in jacks and the factory jumpers are in place. I'm thinking of creating an old-school but high quality 5.1 system by adding a digital surround processor like a used Sony EP9ES and outboard 3-channel amp to make a 5.1 system. Will it be ok to remove the jumpers but leave the "pre-out" jacks open and only use the "main-in' jacks to connect the front L/R output from the processor? Since there's no digital inputs on the NAD, why would you need to pre-out anything? The Sony processor has it's own volume control, as well.

Either I'm missing something or the owner's manual isn't clear enough on this feature. Essentially, I just want to use the power amp part of the NAD while in home theater mode and connect all digital sources to the processor but still use the NAD's pre-amp and volume control for my stereo sources. The diagram in the NAD's owner's manual are from the days of Pro-Logic and it shows the (analog?) processor being connected in a loop to both sets of terminals much like an equalizer would be. That makes sense if you connect a HiFi VCR to the NAD and then need to send the analog output for processing, but what about with digital?

Please advise..
john_z

Showing 1 response by mmarvin19

Hi John.

The pre-out on the NAD receiver is for connecting an external amp.

The main-in is for conecting an external source that has its own volume control. Like, some CD players have a volume control.

Unless your receiver has a pass-through where the signal from another receiver (connected to the main-ins) bypasses the preamp section of the NAD and will drive the NAD's amps directly, I would not recommend doing this. I seriously doubt your NAD has this. In fact, I've never heard of it, but that does not mean it ain't out there somewheres.

Most modern receivers are designed to give the option to use the preamp section only and drive external amps. They are not designed to have an external reciever drive their internal amps.

My suggestion is to buy an external amp(s) for the new receiver.