![]() |
The product we've all been waiting for;!...
On Thu, 28 Jun 2007 13:11:20 +0100, "James Perrett"
wrote: On Wed, 27 Jun 2007 17:33:39 +0100, Don Pearce wrote: On Wed, 27 Jun 2007 17:18:01 +0100, "Serge Auckland" wrote: "tony sayer" wrote in message ... http://www.shakti-innovations.com/audiovideo.htm -- Tony Sayer What staggers me is the references they give. Do Abbey Road *really* use stuff like this, and do they know their name is being use by these people? Glad to see there isn't a single Broadcaster amongst their references. S. They probably sent a free one there, and have based their claim on the fact that it may, just possibly, not have actually been thrown in the bin. Well certain recording engineers seem to use this sort of thing. I know that Andy Jackson, who does most of the Pink Floyd remasters, uses China Cones. Probably trying to recapture the state of mind they all had back in the sixties. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
The product we've all been waiting for;!...
"Don Pearce" wrote in message ... On Thu, 28 Jun 2007 13:11:20 +0100, "James Perrett" wrote: Well certain recording engineers seem to use this sort of thing. I know that Andy Jackson, who does most of the Pink Floyd remasters, uses China Cones. Probably trying to recapture the state of mind they all had back in the sixties. Which produced a damn sight better 'sound' than they can today..... |
The product we've all been waiting for;!...
"Serge Auckland" wrote in message ... "Keith G" wrote http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/Signal.JPG Is reckoned to be 'good' (or 'good enough')...??? (Certainly sounds OK!!) Keith:- If I haven't pressed any wrong tits on my calculator, 55dBf means 55dB above 1 femtowatt, or 10^12 watts 55dB is a power ratio of 3.16 x 10^5 so 55dBf is a power level of 0.316 microwatts. Assuming a standard 75 ohm antenna, that translates to 4.87 mV, so I'd say that was a pretty good signal. Hi Serge - I found this in the manual a little earlier: http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/Voltages.JPG (RTFM was never my strong suit!! ;-) How does it sit with your figuring? There's a bit of a discrepancy - is it easily explained? (Just out of interest and FYI only - no bother whatsoever to me! :-) |
The product we've all been waiting for;!...
"Keith G" wrote in message ... "Serge Auckland" wrote in message ... "Keith G" wrote http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/Signal.JPG Is reckoned to be 'good' (or 'good enough')...??? (Certainly sounds OK!!) Keith:- If I haven't pressed any wrong tits on my calculator, 55dBf means 55dB above 1 femtowatt, or 10^12 watts 55dB is a power ratio of 3.16 x 10^5 so 55dBf is a power level of 0.316 microwatts. Assuming a standard 75 ohm antenna, that translates to 4.87 mV, so I'd say that was a pretty good signal. Hi Serge - I found this in the manual a little earlier: http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/Voltages.JPG (RTFM was never my strong suit!! ;-) How does it sit with your figuring? There's a bit of a discrepancy - is it easily explained? (Just out of interest and FYI only - no bother whatsoever to me! :-) No, not easily explained. Take the example of 50dBf = 86.5uV 75 ohm 86.5 uV into 75 ohms is a power level of 99.76 femtowatts, call it 100 femtowatts. That would be 20dBf in my book *if* dBf means dBs relative to 1 femtowatt. 1 femtowatt is 10^-12 AFAIAC Consequently, their dBf is not relative to 1 femtowatt, or their femtowatt is not mine. According to their figures, you would need a signal strength of better than 80 to get completely (audibly) noise-free audio. Working back, 86.5uV /75 ohm is 50dB relative to 1 attowatt or 10^-15 watt S. -- http://audiopages.googlepages.com |
The product we've all been waiting for;!...
1 femtowatt is 10^-12 AFAIAC
"femto" is the prefix for 10^-15. Martin -- M.A.Poyser Tel.: 07967 110890 Manchester, U.K. http://www.livejournal.com/userinfo.bml?user=fleetie |
The product we've all been waiting for;!...
"Serge Auckland" wrote in message ... "Keith G" wrote Hi Serge - I found this in the manual a little earlier: http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/show/Voltages.JPG (RTFM was never my strong suit!! ;-) How does it sit with your figuring? There's a bit of a discrepancy - is it easily explained? (Just out of interest and FYI only - no bother whatsoever to me! :-) No, not easily explained. Take the example of 50dBf = 86.5uV 75 ohm 86.5 uV into 75 ohms is a power level of 99.76 femtowatts, call it 100 femtowatts. That would be 20dBf in my book *if* dBf means dBs relative to 1 femtowatt. 1 femtowatt is 10^-12 AFAIAC Probably not, asitappens: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atto- Consequently, their dBf is not relative to 1 femtowatt, or their femtowatt is not mine. According to their figures, you would need a signal strength of better than 80 to get completely (audibly) noise-free audio. Working back, 86.5uV /75 ohm is 50dB relative to 1 attowatt or 10^-15 watt OK, disregarding the 'SI prefix' confusion, there's summat not too clear here but the tuner's been retired pro temps in favour of the.... .....wait for it.... ....DAB tuner...!! As Swim picked it consistently over the FM tuner last night (or the the night before) as she thought the FM was comparatively boomy and that there was a feint hiss with a signal strength of about 55 dBf, so your figure of '80 dBf' for *completely* clean audio might not be too wide of the mark? (No good asking me - the FM sounds as 'good as CD' to me!! :-) |
The product we've all been waiting for;!...
"Fleetie" wrote in message ... 1 femtowatt is 10^-12 AFAIAC "femto" is the prefix for 10^-15. Martin -- M.A.Poyser Tel.: 07967 110890 Manchester, U.K. http://www.livejournal.com/userinfo.bml?user=fleetie Correct, my error. How could I forget Pico? What this means is that the tuner's manual is correct, and that you *do* need a signal level of 80 or thereabouts for stable noise-free reception. S. -- http://audiopages.googlepages.com |
All times are GMT. The time now is 01:44 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 AudioBanter.co.uk