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While I understand that optical fibers don't pick up EMI like a metallic wire, it seems that if's there's noise on the electronic side it will still get converted and passed down the fiber. What am I missing?
With fiber there is no conductive path from unit 'A' to unit 'B' so the fiber blocks leakage currents.
I think the only down side to fibre optic may be a bandwidth issue for hi-rez. I'm not sure of this but plenty of folks here that could speak to that.
That makes sense, although it seems the leakage current (at least the AC portion) would get converted to optical signal then reintroduced at the other end of the fiber?
Not the AC power leakage. The converter only converts the audio signal. The leakage currents are trying to get back to their voltage source which is that big power company transformer down the street. So they often use metallic signal cables as an alternate path. In this regard, the optical converter works like an audio transformer.
I have a stupid question. I don't understand. How is Toslink different from this media converter? Not challenging the idea. Just don't come from a technical background. Just know enough to lick my fingers before touching a live electrical wire... These both don't carry electrical energy. Just an audio signal? Best,Blu99Zoomer
Along with the Microrendu, are we getting closer to analogue sound using digital? Are you using linear power supplies to power the converters?Best,Blu
Opinions on how far from the output end the fiber optic device would be effective? I am thinking of trying it right at the output of the modem and then attach the Ethernet cable that runs 40 feet to my rig. Anyone see an issue with this?(keeps one more set of plugs and devices from cluttering up the rack)
need help with setup. can i go right out of my modem to fmc or do i need o router before going to fmc? i can't access the internet when going from the modem to the fmc(tp link mc200cm).thanks, drmike