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My old CD reader has a volume knob and a minijack socket on the front. On the back it has the regular stuff (IDE interface, Molex power) plus a digital sound connector (DG) and an analog sound connector (RGGL). Is there a specific cable meant for connecting the digital or analog sound output to my motherboard, or do I have to solder one myself?
The CD-ROM drive is a Lite-On LTN-486 and has the ability play CDs and output the sound without communicating with a computer.
My motherboard, ASUSTek M4A785TD-V EVO has an integrated sound card, and I can't find any detailed information about the sound card´s specifications, but as far as I know, the motherboard/sound card only have 3 internal audio connectors, 2 of them (1 analog stereo audio output and 1 analog stereo audio input) are already occupied (connected to the front panel), and 3rd one is an S/PDIF audio output. There are 2 audio input sockets on the backpanel. 1 (line-in) is occupied, the last one is for microphones. Can I connect the digital output on the optical drive to the internal S/PDIF? – osvein – 2013-03-15T18:46:04.343
Most recent motherboards will not have a header for CD-ROM audio instead relying on DAE. I referring to old sound cards (take a look at the SB 16 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_Blaster_16) it has like 4 audio headers at the top of the card.
– Brad Patton – 2013-03-15T18:53:48.020