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vegas_berto
6
Sep 14, 2018
It is possible, but what is the use case? Why would you want to use a sound bar if you already have surround sound?
Surround sound by definition has specific channel assignments for speaker locations (i.e., left, center, right, etc). If you're splitting a digitally encoded signal, you're going to be sending the same signal to 2 locations (i.e., Left1 & Left2, Center1 & Center2, etc). Unless you have a way to adjust time alignment from speaker to speaker via DSP or some type of signal processing, you'd literally be defeating the purpose of multi-channel surround encoding. Unless you're the type of person that likes 5.1 Ch Stereo, in which case disregard my post entirely. ;)
Jeffreyrocks
1
Sep 19, 2018
vegas_bertoI fully understand that but I just thought it might be interesting to try it. It might sound really good. Use it almost like a bigger center channel speaker. I was just wondering if it could be done.
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