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gigatoaster

macrumors 68000
Original poster
Jul 22, 2018
1,540
2,981
France
Hello there

On a Mac mini 2014, I connected my amplifier (Rotel RA-12)

When I plug it to audio line in, there is no sound but when I plug it to the headphone, I have sound!

I use Roon and I chose to upsample to 192k. The amp shows 192k.

Could someone help me understand what is the difference between audio line in mini jack and audio out (optical/analog)?
 

cbautis2

macrumors 6502a
Aug 17, 2013
894
1,106
If you use Audio Out (mini toslink) you should get digital audio out of the mac to your Rotel.

Audio line in is for a mic input of a headset
 
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MajorFubar

macrumors 68020
Oct 27, 2021
2,091
3,697
Lancashire UK
In = recording to your Mac, line or mic level
Headphone = analog out via the Mac Mini's DAC, and toslink to an external DAC.

There's a big clue in the socket names. I'm trying to understand why you thought the input socket would send audio to your amp. I notice you're from France so perhaps it's just a 'language-barrier' thing.
 

gigatoaster

macrumors 68000
Original poster
Jul 22, 2018
1,540
2,981
France
Thanks for your explanation. It’s me, I never understood audio out & audio in. It’s like pre out, I never knew what it is for.
 
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MajorFubar

macrumors 68020
Oct 27, 2021
2,091
3,697
Lancashire UK
Thanks for your explanation. It’s me, I never understood audio out & audio in. It’s like pre out, I never knew what it is for.
No problem. Pre-out on an amplifier sends a line-level output to a separate power amplifier, attenuated by the volume control. It differs from an amp's line-out in so far as line-out is not attenuated by the volume control, so if you plug an amp's line-out into a power amp with no volume control, you'll deafen yourself when you play something.

The output on a computer is different: it's kind of equivalent to a pre-out because it too is attenuated by the (software driven) volume control.

When you plug your computer's headphone output into the input of a pre-amp or integrated amp, it's usually wise to turn the computer's headphone volume to maximum, to maximise the signal to noise ratio going into the amp.
 
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