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Pull the other one. The actual rise time is irrelevant. What is relevant is that despite your assertion to the contrary, the pictures you referenced in support of your 'inductance' example show no sign of an exponential decay.w
I've posted Joe's pic, which is active node.
While you seem to understand t-lines, you've obviously never worked with 200 pSec risetime power circuitry.
With this in mind, consider what the output will look like if R2 is inductive.Where will that second spike be in relation to the initial waveform?Inquiring minds want to know...
The spikes pass through without delay. A returned reflection will do exactly that. Remember your calc of a 10 nSec double transit with a 3 to 4 rise?? Will the active circuit have settled in 10 nSec?
Waki it seems to me that you are the one expending an awful lot of energy. Have you ever tried these attenuators? I presume if you have an inquiring mind you might just want to see if all you say holds true in practice or is it just all text book knowledge? You are so sure of yourself & busy trying to save others from themselves that maybe a little cheap experiment in the real world would not go astray?
Waki it seems to me that you are the one expending an awful lot of energy.
Have you ever tried these attenuators?
I presume if you have an inquiring mind you might just want to see if all you say holds true in practice
just all text book knowledge?
You are so sure of yourself
& busy trying to save others from themselves
maybe a little cheap experiment in the real world would not go astray?
Now, here it is that .47nF, 470pF shunt capacitance (fig 17)added to the bias tee:
As is visible, the cable fits very well the termination impedance. The termination impedance measures 74.9ohm on a DMM.
Maybe You could tell why is it so?
Yes, you are right, it is not 15% initially suggested by me. My wrong.
As is visible, the cable fits very well the termination impedance. The termination impedance measures 74.9ohm on a DMM
And raise the reflections in that line by, uhm, 1000%?
And we did not start about those transformer-coupled transmitters..?
30% is what you suggested. Do not overegg the pudding.
I was, however, attacked and vilified for even suggesting that attenuators might increase jitter in this way. At no time did either of the protagonists (art and JosephK) ever investigate such a possibility of their own volition.
Joseph KSo, when we insert an attenuator - and so we turn back to normal - as a side-effect, we also gain a reduction in the level of reflections.Reflections are causing data-correlated jitter. So - in general, through application of attenuators, one is 'exchanging' possible data-dependent jitter for a slightly raised level of random noise at the input. Also, while the relative noise is raised proportionally with the attenuation, the reflections are reduced by twice as much.
... it has no impact whatsoever on the main thrust of my argument with regard to longer cables. Which is that returning reflections @ 44k1 have 177nS in which to land, that they are not themselves normally of a magnitude to be mistaken by the receiver as edges (which would make itself known as something more profound than jitter), that even if the duration of the reflection is 75nS (50 looks a lot fairer to me, given that the reflections in art's scope pictures have only reflected off the DAC), and that they in all probability would be reduced in magnitude if not eliminated entirely by encountering the transmit termination, this still allows for a cable length of at least 10 metres before the reflections start to interfere with the next edge.And in fact if you repeat the estimates at 96k a cable length of 3 metres can still be accommodated without incurring interference.The increase in jitter with thermal noise documented in the app. note refers to comparatively normal operating conditions. When the signal is reduced to marginal levels just above those where the DAC fails to lock up, other mechanisms affecting the level of jitter may come into play. No effort has been put into investigating this possibility.Given that most SPDIF chip manufacturers reccomend a simple resistive termination which is pretty hard to get wrong, while recognising that it is possible to create a termination which measures 75R resistive at DC but not at AC, I still nevertheless recommend that, given the known fallibilities of human judgement in sighted auditions, anyone discovering 75R with a DMM at the input to their DAC, and not being posessed of skills in electronics, or anyone running 44k1 or 48k in any cable length within the specification, or 96k in a cable under 3 metres should find some outlet for their creative energies other than experimenting with attenuators.
Yes. And depending on the Q of the circuit, the recovery will be exponential, or in this case the linearity indicates that the stray inductance is trivial.
And the fact is that it makes no difference whatsoever to the arrival time of the reflection.
But it has no impact whatsoever on the main thrust of my argument with regard to longer cables. Which is that returning reflections @ 44k1 have 177nS in which to land, that they are not themselves normally of a magnitude to be mistaken by the receiver as edges (which would make itself known as something more profound than jitter), that even if the duration of the reflection is 75nS (50 looks a lot fairer to me, given that the reflections in art's scope pictures have only reflected off the DAC), and that they in all probability would be reduced in magnitude if not eliminated entirely by encountering the transmit termination, this still allows for a cable length of at least 10 metres before the reflections start to interfere with the next edge.