"Clean" audio in Scope DSP
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"Clean" audio in Scope DSP
I was getting some odd sounds from a samples library I had which lead me to test Scope's DSP.
I used the control room and used a sine wav and Spectrogram to see what was happening to the audio path..
I started at 1kHz and all looked correct, then I tested it at between 15 and 16kHz ,where I was getting odd sounds. It seemed that there were some sidebands occuring rather than a pure single sine wave.
I will test it more but if I'm getting a side band or two at a certain frequency then God knows what else is being added to a harmonic signal.
Any views?
Thanks
I used the control room and used a sine wav and Spectrogram to see what was happening to the audio path..
I started at 1kHz and all looked correct, then I tested it at between 15 and 16kHz ,where I was getting odd sounds. It seemed that there were some sidebands occuring rather than a pure single sine wave.
I will test it more but if I'm getting a side band or two at a certain frequency then God knows what else is being added to a harmonic signal.
Any views?
Thanks
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- the19thbear
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I didn't take it negatively Gary.garyb wrote:what and where is this measurement?
i'm not confrontational, just confused.
Ok, I set up a sine wave to pass through the audio drivers which is picked up by the spectrogram.
What I am asking is, why is the spectrogram showing sidebands when the sine wave is supposed to be a pure signal.
I tested this because I was getting some "fluttering" affect. I've just replaced the drivers and everything sounds as clear as a bell.Yes they were corrupt.
The wierd thing is that I still get the sidebands as a result. They are very bad in the Lows and lower mids and begin again at about 15.5kHz.
So my question is: What noise is being added to the audio signal?
I can't believe how bad the sound was and how flakey things got when the drivers were corrupted.
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i dont know spectograph;
but what i see (the bands around 100Hz or 1kHz) is a mathprobl. _ there is no noise!
the fft doesnt care about frequency its a mathmodel put on;
-------
use a higher N to get less 'noise' or apply a window before fft;
if interested do a search for _ julius von hann _ hanning window _ to get an idea
good vibes from vienna
but what i see (the bands around 100Hz or 1kHz) is a mathprobl. _ there is no noise!
the fft doesnt care about frequency its a mathmodel put on;
-------
use a higher N to get less 'noise' or apply a window before fft;
if interested do a search for _ julius von hann _ hanning window _ to get an idea
good vibes from vienna
Hi,
If you are getting a ringing metallic tone superimposed to your sound, there is a good chance that your scope have partly lost its synch.
change your sample clock (cycle from 44,1 to 96 then go back). There is a good chance it fail. In my config this is a symptom of a bad sitted STDM cable / board.
cheers
Michel
If you are getting a ringing metallic tone superimposed to your sound, there is a good chance that your scope have partly lost its synch.
change your sample clock (cycle from 44,1 to 96 then go back). There is a good chance it fail. In my config this is a symptom of a bad sitted STDM cable / board.
cheers
Michel
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Are things really that volatile?MD69 wrote:Hi,
If you are getting a ringing metallic tone superimposed to your sound, there is a good chance that your scope have partly lost its synch.
change your sample clock (cycle from 44,1 to 96 then go back). There is a good chance it fail. In my config this is a symptom of a bad sitted STDM cable / board.
cheers
Michel
So many things can go wrong..