What's a dBu ?
On Wed, 02 Nov 2005 17:24:40 GMT, "Jim Gregory"
wrote:
"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message
.. .
On Wed, 02 Nov 2005 00:11:55 GMT, "alan ralph"
wrote:
Hi,
At a radio rally, I bought a ALC/AGC module for £5 which seems to be for
audio use. On the supplied data sheet is shows the input and output as
+4dBu. (Unity Gain) With an ALC range of -16 to +14 dBu and headroom 18dB.
Does anyone know what a dBu is ?
It's an old pro-audio industry reference voltage of 0.775 volts rms,
being the voltage required for 1mW into 600ohms. The U stands for
unloaded or unterminated, to show that it's a voltage rather than an
actual power level.
Your quoted value of +4dBU is 1.223 volts rms.
--
Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering
I had thought dB with the U or u suffix stood for a level at unspecified
impedance, whilst dB followed by an m stood for a level referenced to 1
milliWatt (i e,
term'd 600ohm).
Yes, which is exactly what I said.
U is sometimes used in Europe for denoting voltage, yet measured using the
SI term V.
I think you'll find that V was a standard term, somewhat before SI
standards were thought of................. :-)
Incidentally, AF tone at +4dBu, generated from a low-Z source, equals the
popular
datum of 0VU (just below red zone on a rectifier-driven VU meter with its
series resistor in place).
Actually no, 0VU is 0.775 volts rms regardless of source impedance,
didn't you read the first part of your *own* post?
Usually on critical analogue inputs there is 4-6dB of headroom beyond this
point.
Depends on the recording medium, doesn't it?
--
Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering
|