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On Mon, 17 Oct 2005 00:05:18 GMT, Owen Duffy wrote:
This is seriously bad, replying to one's own post... but. It occurs to me a quick test to reveal whether a SINAD meter is RMS responding or average responding is to test it with a 1KHz square wave. I am not suggesting this as a cal procedure, just a test that is more sensitive to the meter response than noise testing. IIRC, the Taylor series coefficients for a square wave a all even harmonics are 0, the others are 4/pi/n. So, theoretically: - an ideal average responding meter should read (1-2/pi)% which is 36.3% or 8.8dB on an perfect square wave; - an ideal RMS responding meter should read (1-(2^-0.5*4/PI())^2)^0.5*100% which is 43.5% or 7.23dB. Does the maths make sense? I observe that my R1013A indicates 9dB on a good square wave, and the HP334A around 35% (9.1dB)... so another indication that they are average responding. I expect the readings a little low because neither instrument has infinite bandwidth. Owen -- |
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