Welcome Woody.
I don't have an HDMI receiver, but I know in the case of SPDIF you can't send more than two channels via PCM. To send more you have to encode them via DTS or Dolby. Some sound cards can do this on the fly, via DTS Interactive or Dolby Live, and that is a good way to monitor SPEC output.
I'm not aware of a (currently available) USB sound card with this feature, so that does leave us with spam sound cards for your laptop. We'll come back to that in a moment.
The "strange" sound you heard was because you were only hearing the front two channels, with the center and rears removed. You can use ZMon to solo different channels so you can hear the different channels through the two speakers that are working.
The dsp load does sound a little high. In my experience anything over 80% is likely to cause glitching/buzzing while live monitoring. Normally we record "offline" so the dsp load is not a problem, but you can always lower your FFT overlap and/or size settings to reduce the DSP load (at the expense of quality). Make sure your buffer size is set to the highest setting (512 in windows). All those settings are in the DSP tab in Plogue preferences.
OK, back to the sound card. For usb sound cards I recommend ESI gigaport HD or ESI U46XL. The U46XL has a nice feature, direct wire, in that you can route sound between programs digitally, so you could route sound from pandora or last.fm to SPEC as an example.
If you can find a (now discontinued) creative dts-610 on ebay or somewhere that will do dts encoding on the fly and you can connect that to your receiver via SPDIF, if your receiver doesn't have spam ins. Even if your receiver does have spam ins this is a good way to go because most receivers don't do ANY processing, such as bass management, speaker time alignment, EQ, etc. when you are using the spam ins.
Regarding PC speakers, most people aren't very happy with the quality, but you'll need to judge for yourself. Some of the powered speakers for home studio/DJ monitoring are better quality, but then you don't have a subwoofer...
I have a set of Logitec THX speakers at the office for listening to surround music, and they're OK for the low volumes I use at work, but tough to do quality conversions with.
Hope that helps.
Z
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