Forum Discussion
Hello blackdawg47
Thanks for reaching out here in the Community!
The HDMI port of the TV is for input, so information to be displayed on the TV, not for output. The Roku device will need to be plugged directly into the HDMI input and the soundbar will need to be connected differently since it needs to take information from the TV, therefore it won't be using that input.
Could you please verify if your TV has an optical cable output and if your soundbar has an optical input? If so, you can use an optical cable to get sound from your TV to your soundbar.
Regards,
Karla
Hi Karla,
Thanks for your speedy reply! No, my TV does not have the optical cable output. My soundbar does and I have the cable but obviously can't use it. Any other ideas? Will the splitter I bought somehow work?
Kind regards,
Elizabeth
- atc980923 years agoCommunity Streaming Expert
blackdawg47 the splitter you linked will connect one HDMI device to two separate monitors. It doesn't work in reverse, allowing two different devices (Roku and soundbar) to connect to a single display.
If your soundbar can only get it's audio from the HDMI cable from the TV, and there's only a single HDMI port on the TV, I'm afraid there's no way to get audio from the Roku to the soundbar easily. Since you mentioned the soundbar has an optical port, there's one possibility. First, make sure that optical port on the soundbar is an input, not an output. It won't work both ways. If it's an input, then you can use an HDMI audio extractor between the Roku and the TV, which can take the audio from the HDMI signal and send it to the soundbar via optical. However, as you also mentioned, you would also need an HDMI switch, so you can switch the single TV input between the Roku and the soundbar.
This is all a bit complicated, but a TV with a single HDMI port doesn't leave you any other choice, especially if the TV doesn't have an optical audio output. You might look the TV over more closely, because most TVs do have such a port.
Here's an example of an HDMI audio extractor. You might find it far simpler to replace your TV with one that has multiple HDMI ports. Since you mentioned the TV is older, you might find a new TV provides a better image and more options. 🙂
- Orlandi2 years agoReel Rookie
Hi,
I have a similar problem. I have an old LG TV with just 2 HDMIs for video input but nothing for sound output. I just bought a new Eclair sound bar and realised I cannot connect it to my TV (it does not have optical cable, I checked). I tried to connect the Roku to the soundbar and the soundbar to the TV but obviously did not work. How can I get the sound o play on the soundbar if my TV does not have sound output? It does have RCA sockets but I heard the sound quality is not that good, is there any way other than that to connect my Roku/TV to the soundbar using HDMI?? Thanks in advance for the help!
- atc980922 years agoCommunity Streaming Expert
Orlandi wrote:How can I get the sound o play on the soundbar if my TV does not have sound output? It does have RCA sockets but I heard the sound quality is not that good, is there any way other than that to connect my Roku/TV to the soundbar using HDMI?? Thanks in advance for the help!
If your TV has no sound output, then there's no way to feed it's audio to a soundbar. Are you saying the Soundbar doesn't have an HDMI connection to feed to/from the TV? If it does, your TV should (but depending on how old it is maybe not) support ARC, which means it can send the audio from the TV to the soundbar through the HDMI cable. But if the soundbar only had an optical input, you're pretty much dead in the water. Yes, you could send the analog audio via the red and white RCA connection, but it's going to be simple 2 channel stereo, with no surround channels available. Assuming your soundbar can process 5.1 audio, you'd be missing much of the audio.