
December 1st 09, 07:40 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Low capacitance audio coax
Don Pearce wrote:
On Tue, 01 Dec 2009 20:11:15 +0000, Ian Bell
wrote:
Don Pearce wrote:
On Tue, 01 Dec 2009 18:15:25 +0000, Ian Bell
wrote:
Don Pearce wrote:
On Tue, 01 Dec 2009 10:20:18 +0000, Ian Bell
wrote:
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article ,
Ian Bell wrote:
I need to send an audio signal from a 50K ohm source over a distance of
a couple of feet in a screened cable. However, most audio coax seems to
be about 100pF/ft so 2ft of this and 50K will turn over just below
16KHz. So, anyone know a source of low capacitance audio coax?
Those sort of output impedances were common in valve days. Use a video or
RF coax to your requirements. Maplin sell a range by the metre.
I keep forgetting about Maplin. I checked their catalogue and they have
an AV coax by Shark that is only 65pF/metre.
Thanks Dave
Cheers
Ian
Still worth adding that inductor. Have a look at the difference it
makes, assuming 2 feet of 65pF/m cable. The green solid line is
without the inductor, the blue solid line is with.
http://www.soundthoughts.co.uk/look/highx.png
The inductor here is 56mH, connected to the wiper of the pot.
d
Looks interesting. Can you post the .asc file?
Cheers
Very easy. I just used one source, but with two cable options.
http://www.soundthoughts.co.uk/read/cable.asc
d
Thanks for that. It made me realise that the worst case source impedance
from a 100K pot is not 50K but 25K so things are only half as bad as I
thought. LOL
Cheers
Ian
Was it a 100k pot? Ok, change the inductor to 15mH or 12mH - they go
either side of optimum.
d
I need to make another tweak because there is a 150K or 220K across the
cap at the far end - will probably just worsen the Q.
Cheers
Ian
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