

🎶 Elevate your audio game with Cubilux—where pro sound meets effortless style.
The Cubilux 2-in-1 USB to SPDIF adapter is a compact, plug-and-play device designed for professionals seeking high-resolution stereo audio conversion between USB and optical SPDIF interfaces. Supporting up to 192kHz/24bit audio, it enables seamless two-way transmission for laptops and PCs, making it ideal for recording or playback with soundbars and amplifiers. Note: it supports stereo only and is incompatible with smartphones, tablets, TVs, or car USB ports.


















| ASIN | B0D7DJRPPB |
| Item model number | Z10-14BK |
| Manufacturer | Cubilux |
| Product Dimensions | 23 x 2 x 1.5 cm; 59 g |
C**D
Wow, if you need optical to USB this does the trick. Windows is an annoying pain and you must get Bit depth and rate matching otherwise audio is wonky. Once your settings are correct it works great.
P**C
Livraison, qualité matériel et performances conformes à l'annonce et aux exigences.
V**I
Un aparato muy pequeño (menos que un mechero tipo Zipo, pero que funciona a la perfección. Lo he configurado para trabajar a 48Khz y 24bits en Ubunto (por medio de la terminal y con ayuda de la IA) y he conseguido recatar mi viejo previo MindPrint que no tenía puerto USB. Recomendado!
A**N
UPDATE - screen saver / sleep issue in Windows 11 and workaround: After using this adapter for a while I discovered that this device prevents my screen saver from activating and my display from sleeping. I was able to work around it by disabling the associated USB Input Device in Device Manager. Once disabled my screen saver activates and my display/PC will go into sleep mode again, and the device still works. This seems to be a common issue with some other USB DACs which is what led me to the workaround. This USB digital converter does just what it advertises at a reasonable price point. It is plug and play in Windows 11, showing as a generic S/PDIF in and out digital audio interface up to 24bit 192 kHz supporting DTS and Dolby Digital pass through to digital receivers (did not test either of those). Although using a Savitech chipset (9123L as confirmed by Cubilux support) it unfortunately does not supply ASIO drivers. A very similar product that does include an ASIO driver would be the Hifime S2 Digi which supports up to 32bit 384kHz. However I can't really dock points on this Cubilux since it doesn't advertise ASIO support and is priced accordingly cheaper. The construction of the Cubilux vs the S2 Digi is a bit nicer since it is made of metal instead of plastic, and uses a USB-C input port instead of Micro-USB. Works reliably for my application which is to provide a simultaneous stereo S/PDIF input and output interface for an old MOTU Audio Express device whose vendor-provided USB Windows drivers crackle and often fail to load after wake from sleep. Contrary to what it says on the listing it is actually also plug and play in Android on my S24 Ultra where I was able to access both the output and input. Same on Ubuntu Linux. Hopefully Cubilux will consider ASIO support in a v2 update.
H**A
Rigged and built to last
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
1 month ago