Then we go along trying to find ways to measure it and if we fail and it is consistently heard, we work with that .. Eventually we will find a way to measure if, since it exists ...
Of course that suggests ears prevail over measurments.
Then we go along trying to find ways to measure it and if we fail and it is consistently heard, we work with that .. Eventually we will find a way to measure if, since it exists ...
120 db down would mean a jitter spec of only 50 picoseconds relative to 20 Khz audio bandwidth (would be even lower for higher bandwidth). Consumer equipment routinely has jitter that is orders of magnitude higher. I have some samples from my WSR article: http://www.madronadigital.com/Library/DigitalAudioJitter.htmlMy comments about 80 dB (or 100 dB) are more theoretical than practical. When people argue about stuff like jitter being audible, even though it's typically 120+ dB down, I know they're imagining things.
'Yamaha RX-V3900:
SPDIF: 183 picosecondss
HDMI: 7,700 picoseconds"
First one is -104 db but HDMI is at -72 db. Cassette tapes had this kind of noise floor!
I don't see any reason for not advocating better hygiene here. By making excuses for the equipment vendors and not demanding to see such measurements, they get a license to make their equipment a hair better than bad enough for everyone to hear the distortion....
...You may not hear one spike but might sense the music getting harsher when there is a spray of thousands overlaying on usually weak music signals at higher frequencies for example.
That's not really the question. It supposes we passed the "blind test." Then we heard it but still can't measure it. What then?
Greg
You may not hear one spike but might sense the music getting harsher when there is a spray of thousands overlaying on usually weak music signals at higher frequencies for example.
Well, if you're measuring at the amplifiers output terminals, and not exceeding what the amp can drive, the speaker's varying impedance shouldn't have an affect.
My comments about 80 dB (or 100 dB) are more theoretical than practical. When people argue about stuff like jitter being audible, even though it's typically 120+ dB down, I know they're imagining things.
When we measure THD at fantastically low levels, am I correct in thinking that there is significant averaging over many cycles?
Is the key to improving the null to do it in software with many repeated correlations? Maybe that's cheating, but if it's a noise issue, the noise can be characterised separately. Hopefully the genuine amplifier distortion artefacts would be repeatable and still show up after the averaging.
So, let's not lose sight of the fact that Ethan has clearly stated that the best he was able to achieve in null testing the output from a loudspeaker is a 50dB null. The speaker output is what we listen to & is the only valid output to test when we want to evaluate a playback system's transparency/equivalence.
This null is 30dB worse than his theoretical 80dB threshold for equivalence of two systems.
Please tell me what this 50dB null proves/shows, if anything?
Yes - the THD might be measured in the old fashioned way with a notch filter for the fundamental. In which case the residual is averaged in an analog circuit. If its an FFT then that forms an average over the acquisition window (typically many thousands of sample periods long). Some analysers average several sample windows too - I know AP has this facility.
I'm unclear how the noise may be characterised separately in practice - do you have any suggestions?
Noise is residual output with no input signal at all.
OK, you've had your course at my 1 minunte university. Send in your tuition money.![]()
If Ethan has measured -50 dB nulls between different (models of) amplifiers I am somewhat amazed. How is that Bob Carver couldn't even get to -40 dB nulls between two amplifiers that were specifically designed to sound the same??
AFAI can ascertain, he measured a -50dB null between two music tracks which were fed through the exact same playback system. The two tracks are the same original track but recorded at different levels & then normalised to the same level for comparison & null testing, I believe.If Ethan has measured -50 dB nulls between different (models of) amplifiers I am somewhat amazed. How is that Bob Carver couldn't even get to -40 dB nulls between two amplifiers that were specifically designed to sound the same??
No, Don, I don't believe you are correct - Bob states that the best he can get in matching his production amplifiers (for a certain series model) is about -36dB null i.e two identical amplifiers.Don't forget Bob was not comparing two identical amplifiers; he was comparing one to his version after he did his best to emulate a tube amp in a SS design. I suspect he could have gotten a deeper null with more time but it was not worth it. I would hope in-band nulls would be pretty good (50 - 60 dB) for a couple of amplifiers loafing along.
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