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carlmart wrote:
My guess is some of you know the trick of using a "fake-balanced" cable to connect an unbalanced output to a balanced input. [description of 'impedance balancing' removed] What I am not sure of is how far that trick can go in rejecting hum and noise. It goes as well as: 1. your estimate of the output impedance of the driving stage. If you know the impedance precisely, you can use one resistor which is precisely equal to the output impedance. Otherwise you need to know the output impedance so that both legs have the same actual impedance. 2. The impedance of the output stage is constant with frequency (and this includes frequencies well above the audio band where you still want rejection). 3. The CMRR of the input stage. Basically, impedance balancing works well at audio frequencies, it tends not to work all that great in the RF region but often well enough. It does not work as well as a transformer for the most part, and often the input stage balancing is the weak link anyway. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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