no that is to convert hdmi to 3 rca jacks in the out direction.
No, you can't.Can you hook up an equalizer to Onkyo TX-SR353?
I guess we should take a step back and ask OP what his source signal is. If it is a device that has HDMI output, such a TV or DVD player or some media streamer, then yes, an HDMI audio extractor can convert audio to analog, but then he'll lose the whole 5.1 DD/DD+ aspect of it. And what about the video part of it? How will it all come back into the AVR?You want an "HDMI audio extractor", which will give you analog audio output from an HDMI source.
The main thing that I want it for, is to listen to music from my phone, from Pandora. Did this stereo also come with that microfone adjuster?I guess we should take a step back and ask OP what his source signal is. If it is a device that has HDMI output, such a TV or DVD player or some media streamer, then yes, an HDMI audio extractor can convert audio to analog, but then he'll lose the whole 5.1 DD/DD+ aspect of it. And what about the video part of it? How will it all come back into the AVR?
Now, if his source signal is just 2-channel analog audio (RCA), then sure, he can just run that source into his equalizer and then send it to the AVR using the AVR's analog audio inputs.
The main thing that I want it for, is to listen to music from my phone, from Pandora. Did this stereo also come with that microfone adjuster?
Like brian703 stated, if your phone has a headphone jack, then just run a 3.5mm to 2xRCA cable from the phone to your equalizer and then another 2xRCA cable from equalizer to the CD input on your AVR.The main thing that I want it for, is to listen to music from my phone, from Pandora.
It did.Did this stereo also come with that microfone adjuster?
Not every recording is the same probably why they still build them today and yes I have a smaller version on my 10k rig I listen on.Good performing equipment should not need an EQ.
In majority of cases it's the room acoustics that throws frequency response out of whack, even with the best equipment. Proper EQ can help with this, assuming you have a way to measure the response. This usually means using digital EQ (DSP) instead of old school analog one which is just not granular enough to be useful.Good performing equipment should not need an EQ.
I want to hear the material as it was naturally recorded, not doctored up.Not every recording is the same probably why they still build them today and yes I have a smaller version on my 10k rig I listen on.
https://www.schiit.com/products/loki-max
https://www.schiit.com/products/lokius