iPod headphone to RCA jacks adapter cable


Wanting to use a first generation iPod Classic, with the highest resolution song recordings on my home stereo system and would like a recommendation for which iPod headphone to RCA jacks adapter cable to use.
128x128sar67
...and, in the mean time while I wait the the i20 stereo dock, shall I reupload the iTune songs with Apple's 'lossless encoding', and, if so, how? Appreciatively
Sar67- please explain what you mean by "re-uploading the iTune songs." In what format now are the songs you would be uploading? CDs, mp3, higher resolution downloads?

If the songs are already in mp3 format you won't gain anything by converting them to Apple lossless, they'll just be larger files that take up more room on your iPod but won't give you any better sonic quality. If you're re-ripping CDs into Apple lossless you'll get the same quality as CD at about half the file size, which is a good thing on a small iPod hard drive.
The Nano has uploaded songs from my CDs directly: AAC, 128kbps at 44.100 rate.

Steve, I have not gotten complete and accurate audiophyle information from any Apple person!!!

Just spoke with an Apple tech-guy. This is what he said.
(I just received the PureDigital i20 stereo dock and need to buy an optical cable so I can route the songs to my California Audion Labs D/A converter. But, I will do nothing until I hear from you and the Audiogon forum to make sure)

A senior tech said that my iPod Nano's 4 gig hard drive is too small to upload songs 'losslessly'. Currently, 287 songs take-up 1/3 of its hard drive space and with lossless re-ripping (necessary to do since the current upload quality is inferior) will take-up up to 10x more hard drive space.

Please help. Yours and his file size statements are quite different. Need I re-rip from the CDs to get CD-quality sound from the iPod through the i20 stereo dock? If not, how (and, can)shall I reprocess the already recorded songs at iTunes?

Thank you for your time.
Appreciatively,
Mark
The Apple tech gave you good information. It isn't quite true that you don't have room for any lossless files on your Nano but you won't be able to put many CDs on a drive that size.

Apple Lossless files take up about half as much space as the standard AIFF files on a CD but even at that you would have room for no more than 10 or 12 CDs, possibly fewer depending on the album lengths.

Yes, you do need to re-rip from the CD to get CD-quality sound. When you ripped the files at 128 kbps you threw away a lot of information and it's not possible to recover that by reprocessing those files to a different format. You'd get bigger files but they wouldn't sound any better.

If you are set on using the Nano and you want a large music collection on it a compromise might be to re-rip at a higher mp3 bit rate, like 320 kbps. It won't be CD quality but will let you put a lot more tunes on the Nano and they'll sound somewhat better than the low resolution files you now have on there.

If you want maximum quality playback and you want a lot of music accessible you'll definitely want an iPod with a much, much larger drive.
Yo Steve,
Thanks for the clarity.
After all this good information, I never got the i20 to work so off it went to the seller for a full refund!
Shall I buy another or research another model or brand?
Hope you are having a nice weekend.
Appreciatively,
Mark