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rickman wrote in :
On 10/7/2014 2:07 PM, gareth wrote: "Ralph Mowery" wrote in message ... I thought the triangle wave had even harmonics in it, but found out it actually has odd harmonics but they decrease with the square of the order instead of just a simple 1/N. It is the sawtooth (equal slopes at rise and decay) that is made up of even harmonics. You seem to have them backwards... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangle_wave http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sawtooth_wave (I cannot speak with any authority in the triangle wave) Or much authority in the sawtooth wave as it turns out... ![]() Well, he's not far wrong as it happens... I'm new to RF and radio but have spent a lot more time with audio synthesisers. A triangle is a special case of a sawtooth (properly, ramp) wave. Like the square, it has no even harmonics, but the moment you change the speeds of the two parts of the ramp in one cycle, even harmonics occur with increasing strength the more it gets skewed. The really awkward bit with sawtooth waves is that they are a VERY general case, and include ramps but also nonlinear slopes. This is something I don't get into with maths, but it has strong implications for timbres especially when emulating natural instruments like brass or strings or even old synths that used relaxation oscillators. In radio techniques I imagine the clipping and filtering (or other means) to precondition a rough signal for the XOR phase comparator input of a PLL, taking advantage of its high noise immunity even with the raw clipped signal (it still requires a 50% width ratio), though a bit of filtering after clipping can help there. |
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