Forum Discussion
Examine the ports on the back of your TV with a flashlight, the ARC one should be clearly labeled, it's HDMI 1 on my TV but it may be different on yours.
If you don't have an HDMI ARC connection I believe you can still use the Roku soundbar by connecting it with the included optical wire to your TV's optical output.
This way you'll get the soundbar audio on all inputs on the TV when you switch away from the Roku HDMI input you have it connected with.
- jv20242 years agoReel Rookie
Hi Emissary, thanks. I do have a port labeled HDMI 1. Is that it then? If so, I'm guessing I can just purchase the device and connect the cable there and be good to go?
- atc980922 years agoCommunity Streaming Expert
I downloaded the manual for the Vizio d58u-d3 and it shows the ARC port as HDMI 1.
However, HDMI 5 is the only port that supports 4k/60. The other HDMI ports are all 4K/30 only. Might not be important for you, but just be aware. Also, HDCP2.2 is only supported on HDMI 1, 2 and 5. Seems silly the ARC port isn't the highest quality HDMI port.
- Emissary352 years agoRoku Guru
Wow that sounds like a very poor design to not make the HDMI ARC port the highest quality. To make that 30hz only while others are 60hz is absolutely ridiculous!
- Emissary352 years agoRoku Guru
jv2024 Check every port that says "HDMI" and look for the one that says "ARC" next to it, it is HDMI 1 on all of my TVs and probably is on yours too, but it could be any one of them depending on your TV brand and model.
Which ever HDMI input says "ARC" that is the one you want to connect your Roku Streambar to with the HDMI cable. If none of the ports says "ARC" then that means your TV doesn't support that feature.
Which means it doesn't matter which HDMI port you connect your Roku streambar to. But you would also have to connect the included optical wire that comes with the streambar to the optical port on the back of the TV.
I found a youtube video for you showing the setup of the Roku streambar, I hope this is helpful to you.