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On 3/6/2015 5:13 PM, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
On 3/6/2015 3:48 PM, rickman wrote: On 3/6/2015 3:11 PM, Jerry Stuckle wrote: Plus, DSPs do not look at amplitude. They measure the instantaneous slope of the signal and store it as a digital value depending on the number of bits, i.e. 16 bit samples would have 2^15 negative slope values and 2^15-1 positive slope values (plus zero slope). By recreating the instantaneous slope that is stored digitally, the DAC converts the digital signal back to an analog signal. This is just plain wrong. I'm not sure why you make a distinction between DSP's [sic] and any other digital device since a DSP is not needed at all to digitize or compress a signal, but the sample produced by an ADC *is* the instantaneous value of the signal and not the slope. If you were to compare adjacent ADC samples and calculate the slope that would be a form of ADPCM. The DAC in turn converts this instantaneous value back into analog followed by filtering to remove the higher frequency images if important. Once again you are wrong, Rick. Integrating ADCs have been used at least since the 70's and are much more accurate and noise immune than a simple level ADC. ADPCM isn't even closely related. I'm only going to point out your error and then I won't argue with you further. No one is talking about integrating ADCs. You said, "They measure the instantaneous slope of the signal and store it as a digital value". That is not what an integrating ADC does, nor does any other ADC. The integrating ADC uses the input to charge up a capacitance (the integrator) for some period of time, then a reference is used to discharge the "integrated" voltage and the time this takes is measured. This is *not* measuring the "instantaneous slope" of the input signal. In fact "integrating" and "instantaneous" are contradictory since "integrating" takes time and "instantaneous" is... well, instantaneous. Also I will mention that although integrating ADCs are good for noise rejection, they are *very* slow and only used in such low sample rate apps as volt meters and the like. More accurate systems like weight scales typically use sigma-delta converters for low noise, low power and high resolution or in the case of and high end audio sigma-delta converters offer high linearity and low distortion. I think one reason integrating converters are used in volt meters is that they can be designed to always display 0 for a 0 input voltage which is important to consumer confidence. ADPCM is a form of compression comparing adjacent ADC samples to calculate the differential of the signal which is the closest thing to what you are describing by the "instantaneous slope". -- Rick |
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