HDMI ARC: What is it and Why You Should Care?Posted by Jennifer Truong on June 4th, 2019 If you buy a new TV or soundbar, you might have come across the new label about “ARC” while setting up the HDMI adapters. That indicates one of the best features which saves your money, reduces cable web and makes your set up more simplified. What Is ARC?Ever since the HDMI 1.4 was introduced in the market, ARC is available on TVs, soundbars, and other gadgets. It is a protocol which offers two-way communication between devices over a single HDMI connection. This port lets you use HDMI as both an input and an audio output. It came in 2009 and became a common standard. Majorly you would find it with all types of TVs, soundbars, and receivers. All the devices which support HDMI 1.4 would support ARC. Things You Can Do With ARC:It provides a two-way flow of sound means that you can use it for things which require extra cables.
How To Setup:To set up ARC completely with the system, you can follow the steps given in the guidelines below. Depending on the model and manufacturer, it might take some time to activate it. Determine the ARC port on your system. Most TV manufacturers offer ARC output over HDMI port instead of all three or four port on the set. Mostly they try to indicate it with labels. If HDMI adapters ports don’t have proper labeling, check the TV manual. It will help you navigate to the HDMI ARC that you can use. Activate the ARC output on the TV to start leveraging it. You can find this feature in the settings menu under audio. In many TVs, this feature auto-detect devices with ARC capacity. While in others you need to turn on the feature manually. One thing to keep in mind while plugging in your stuff is that ARC-enabled port should be there with your external audio device. Paradoxically…Even our brand-new iPhone model would have some drawbacks. Just like that, the simplicity of ARC and audio over HDMI is viable, but it has some disadvantages as well. The main aim behind designing this stuff was to replace S/PDIF digital audio outputs. Thus, it supports each and every audio format that wouldn’t normally pass through S/PDIF. For instance, Dolby Digital, DTS and PCM audio. It can handle TV’s regular two-channel audio and 5.1 surround sound without any troubles. Even though it replaces the S/PDIF standard, it can’t send HD or high-bit-rate audio with high standards like Dolby Atmos and DTS:X. It can be little overwhelming as the downstream audio over HDMI can carry the signal without any obstacles. This is ARC related disadvantage only which is one of the major limitations of the ARC specifications. Some TVs actually downgrade the audio output over ARC by converting everything to two-channel sound even if it originates as 5.1 audio. Depending on your TV model you might wind up with the lower sound quality even after using ARC. In this case, if you want, you can connect an extra audio cable or two which may cause more trouble for you but will be worth it. The Power Of HDMI ARCIn the present scenario, many TVs dumb down and compress audio signals before passing them down to HDMI cables while others do support more channels. Dolby Atmos albeit uses a compressed codec like Dolby digital plus instead of Dolby True HD. Now that requires much bandwidth. But with ARC, you can send the original, full-resolution audio signal via HDMI cables. Which produces the best sound without any compromises. Like it? Share it!More by this author |