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Again, are you trying to investigate & understand this or are you trying to display your learning?
The cable is 1 metre. The roundtrip time for a 1 metre cable of 0.88 velocity factor is ~7.7nS. The rise time in question is stated to be 3-4pS, but this is absurd, he means nS. The reflection therefore cannot arrive before the transition is complete.
OK John.I have seen other posts of yours, if you are the same jneutron, you are accessible to reason.
Regardless of whether the rise time is in pS or nS, tell me how the reflection can arrive before the rise time is complete.
Manufacturers often slow the rise time to avoid EMC issues.
In that case, with a short cable, the reflection can transit the cable in 2 directions and interfere with the rising edge of the pulse.
This is what art is talking about, short cables, but he gets it wrong.
I do understand this, better than anybody else who has contributed to the discussion....
On some topics I am quite good,
So I find especially amusing your humble statement:
Please keep the topic technical
With this in mind, consider what the output will look like if R2 is inductive.
1. The input node will not remain at zero volts if a high slew is forced in. The output of the monolithic amp will reflect the input error times some gain, and the R2 current will rise at some rate defined by the inductance. The net result will be an output spike that will eventually drop to the circuit gain times the input. Reduce the inductance of R2, this spike will reduce.
2. At the onset, the amp input node is not zero because of R2 inductance..now, you have an amp with an input that is too large...there is a distinct possibility that the amp will behave badly as a result. Yes, the output will go in the correct direction initially, but once it has reached the final value, will it stop or overshoot the mark? If internal stages saturate as a result of overdrive on the input node, who knows.3. Knowing the amp has been "severely" overdriven as a result of high di/dt into R1, it may need some time to recover, time beyond it's normal bandwidth.
4. Any reflection off the input node will have a rapid rise, as pat provided pics of. If the driver "box" reflects that back to the receiver, the input node will immediately pass the spike through to the output...exactly as it did the initial.
Where will that second spike be in relation to the initial waveform?
Fascinating John,What is your estimate on a percentage basis of the likelihood of encountering such an arrangement in a DAC?w
here it is, the response of a video amp, with feedback, when "pinged" with a TDR. That is, the same way like Pat has done it here with that Dac.(For those who don't have access to the Diyhifi site - which is a pity )It's a little bit different, because this TDR shot contains also the effect of the saturated amplifier.Without that it would "relax" back all the way to the baseline.
Thanks for your post. I understand that often my style is confrontational, but I do make an effort to moderate my tone.
Obviously this is easy to say but I am capable of changing my position and apologising.
OK, this is the basic setup we are discussing. Sometimes the DAC is removed and the coax is left open circuit to demonstrate the reflection coefficient of +1.The yellow arrow on the LHS indicates the rising edge of a pulse. The pulse duration is 7 divisions or 350nS, corresponding to a long SPDIF pulse (@ 44k1). The orange circle surrounds a feature which looks like a thorn, the rising edge of which is ~50nS after the rising edge of the pulse. This feature is the (inductive) reflection from the DAC. The cable is ~5 metres long, and this reflection is as a result of the pulse edge (on the left) having travelled to the DAC and back. This is a roundtrip, there has been one reflection.There is no question of this being an 'active' reflection, it's shape is entirely characteristic of a passive inductive termination, if it were active one would expect to see a change in level on the RHS when the output has settled.
This is anyway entirely irrelevant, what is of concern is the duration.
I consider it unfair and self-indulgent to inflict suggestions about RF attenuators on an unsuspecting public without taking the time to make these facts clear. How many people are there out there running 16/44k1 on a 2 metre cable going 'doesn't it sound better with the attenuators'. Don't tell me it won't happen.w
Yeah, the circuit (with R2 inductor) is an inverting differentiator, differentiate a square wave you get a dirac delta function.
(Why would you?) You might, just, conceivably put a ferrite bead in there to kill oscillation, but it'll have a low Q, you'll have to keep the inductance tiny in relation to the resistance to keep the output waveshape, which'll mean no significant effect on the input match,
and anyway there are so many better solutions. If it's a real inductor with some Q, the resistance will be tiny so the gain will be -R2/R1, so if R1 is any size at all the gain will be less than 1. Maybe .01? Less? This just isn't useful.
It's a real world circuit not an ideal differentiator, what do you expect? You're going to get a useless output. You made R2 an inductor.
Yeah, if the driver "box" reflects that back to the receiver. If the amplifier has recovered from being "severely" overdriven. So what? We're talking about the reflected wave artifact and the edges of the incident wave, not the output.
Hmm..for the linked example to diyhifi...posted by joseph K.....100%
Pat's scope is clearly more consistent with an inductive termination, whereas your scope doesn't have the exponential decay.
100% of one example.And where is the spike followed by the trailoff? The picture shows a resistive response moderated by the amplifiers response time, not an inductive response.