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#1
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Hello, all--
I hesitate to bring up this topic while the Doppler wars are still in an unsettled state (please, guys, don't bring it here), but I've spent much of this past week trying to learn about and measure the "transient intermodulation distortion" and/or "slewing-induced distortion" of some recording-related equipment, and would like to report in. This is something I've been wanting to come to terms with for years. I began by going to the AES Web site and downloading and reading the papers of Prof. Matti Otala from the 1970s and early 1980s. More up-to-date analyses of Otala's work have shown that what his tests show is not limited only to dynamic distortion. And with the equipment I have available, the best signal source I could create doesn't have nearly as high a slewing rate as either of Otala's two main recommended test signals. So my results are probably more like those of ordinary IM tests, only weighted somewhat more toward revealing dynamic distortions. I'm virtually certain that better-controlled test signals could provoke worse behavior from some circuits, and I'd really like to see that, since it could well reveal even further differences among different circuits. Still, even with what I have, I was able to find some clear distinctions among the distortion performance of different pieces of equipment. That's about all I can say because of the limits of my test signals. OK, I can say a few things in the more clear-cut cases: - The ART "Tube MP" is grotesquely bad. By a considerable margin it had the highest distortion, in its normal operating range, of any equipment I tested. And the Aphex "Tubessence" preamp (model 107, not the 1100) had second highest. - My better preamps (Millenia Media HV-3B, FMR "Real Nice Preamp", Grace Lunatec V2 and V3, M Audio DMP3, Sonosax SX-M2, Symetrix SX-202, and a dbx 760X modified by Jim Williams) all had low noise and distortion when stimulated by this test signal, with small differences in favor of the Millenia Media preamp. They had distinctly different distortion spectra, but were more or less similar in the total amount of their distortion. - Despite its somewhat higher EIN specification, the noise/distortion floor of the RNP in the presence of the test signal really wasn't noticeably higher than that of most of the other good preamps. - The M Audio "Flying Calf" A/D converter, surprisingly, held its own against far more expensive converters, while the D/A section of the "Flying Cow" converter was not nearly as good--though my "Cow" is an older model, and the chips (cow chips?) in their newer models have a higher specification. |
#2
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David Satz wrote:
That's about all I can say because of the limits of my test signals. OK, I can say a few things in the more clear-cut cases: - The ART "Tube MP" is grotesquely bad. By a considerable margin it had the highest distortion, in its normal operating range, of any equipment I tested. And the Aphex "Tubessence" preamp (model 107, not the 1100) had second highest. Open up the 107 and you'll find a pot in the middle of the RPA circuit. That pot is preset at the factory for a particular THD level. You can turn it up and down if you want more or less distortion. - My better preamps (Millenia Media HV-3B, FMR "Real Nice Preamp", Grace Lunatec V2 and V3, M Audio DMP3, Sonosax SX-M2, Symetrix SX-202, and a dbx 760X modified by Jim Williams) all had low noise and distortion when stimulated by this test signal, with small differences in favor of the Millenia Media preamp. They had distinctly different distortion spectra, but were more or less similar in the total amount of their distortion. I can believe this. Now, what happens if you put a 1:1 transformer in front of one of these? The transformer should be much more of a source of distortion. - The M Audio "Flying Calf" A/D converter, surprisingly, held its own against far more expensive converters, while the D/A section of the "Flying Cow" converter was not nearly as good--though my "Cow" is an older model, and the chips (cow chips?) in their newer models have a higher specification. There are also some board layout changes too, which may make for a change in stability. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#3
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"Scott Dorsey" wrote in message
David Satz wrote: - My better preamps (Millenia Media HV-3B, FMR "Real Nice Preamp", Grace Lunatec V2 and V3, M Audio DMP3, Sonosax SX-M2, Symetrix SX-202, and a dbx 760X modified by Jim Williams) all had low noise and distortion when stimulated by this test signal, with small differences in favor of the Millenia Media preamp. They had distinctly different distortion spectra, but were more or less similar in the total amount of their distortion. I can believe this. Now, what happens if you put a 1:1 transformer in front of one of these? The transformer should be much more of a source of distortion. Indeed. - The M Audio "Flying Calf" A/D converter, surprisingly, held its own against far more expensive converters, while the D/A section of the "Flying Cow" converter was not nearly as good--though my "Cow" is an older model, and the chips (cow chips?) in their newer models have a higher specification. There are also some board layout changes too, which may make for a change in stability. I tested two different revisions of the Flying Cow: http://www.pcavtech.com/adc-dac/Cow/index.htm The "Revision E" was pretty impressive, and says a lot for the philosophy of continual evolutionary upgrades at M-Audio, |
#4
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"David Satz" wrote in message
om... More up-to-date analyses of Otala's work have shown that what his tests show is not limited only to dynamic distortion. And with the equipment I have available, the best signal source I could create doesn't have nearly as high a slewing rate as either of Otala's two main recommended test signals. So my results are probably more like those of ordinary IM tests, only weighted somewhat more toward revealing dynamic distortions. I'm virtually certain that better-controlled test signals could provoke worse behavior from some circuits, and I'd really like to see that, since it could well reveal even further differences among different circuits. Still, even with what I have, I was able to find some clear distinctions among the distortion performance of different pieces of equipment. That's about all I can say because of the limits of my test signals. OK, I can say a few things in the more clear-cut cases: - The ART "Tube MP" is grotesquely bad. By a considerable margin it had the highest distortion, in its normal operating range, of any equipment I tested. And the Aphex "Tubessence" preamp (model 107, not the 1100) had second highest. [snipped the rest] David, it's not clear from your post -- were you using Otala's sine/square test signal? Or were you doing a different sort of IM test? Peace, Paul |
#5
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Paul Stamler wrote:
David, it's not clear from your post -- were you using Otala's sine/square test signal? Or were you doing a different sort of IM test? I was trying to come as close as possible to Otala's DIM 30 sine/square test signal. But I wasn't able to duplicate it with the equipment I have available, and in fact don't know the actual maximum slew rate of the test signal that I ended up with--surely less than intended, though. That's why I'm offering no numbers, and why I suspect that the test could have been made quite a bit more sensitive. If you or anyone else here has suggestions for affordable ways to generate a DIM 30 signal, I'd appreciate them greatly. (DIM 30 = 3.18 kHz square wave + 15 kHz sine wave in a 4:1 ratio, low-pass filtered at 30 kHz -- see Leinonen, Otala and Curl 1976, "Method for Measuring Transient Intermodulation Distortion," AES preprint #1185.) --best regards |
#6
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#7
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![]() "David Satz" wrote in message om... Paul Stamler wrote: I was trying to come as close as possible to Otala's DIM 30 sine/square test signal. But I wasn't able to duplicate it with the equipment I have available, and in fact don't know the actual maximum slew rate of the test signal that I ended up with--surely less than intended, though. That's why I'm offering no numbers, and why I suspect that the test could have been made quite a bit more sensitive. If you or anyone else here has suggestions for affordable ways to generate a DIM 30 signal, I'd appreciate them greatly. (DIM 30 = 3.18 kHz square wave + 15 kHz sine wave in a 4:1 ratio, low-pass filtered at 30 kHz -- see Leinonen, Otala and Curl 1976, "Method for Measuring Transient Intermodulation Distortion," AES preprint #1185.) You can generate an okay square wave using a 555 timer chip, probably adequate for the task. And you can make quite a good sine wave oscillator using the circuit on p. 186 of Jung's "Audio IC Op-Amp Applications"; use 5532 chips. Sum the two signals at the appropriate ratio in an active summing amp made from the spare side of one of the 5532s, or an LM318; bandlimit the summing amp to 30kHz using a cap in parallel with the feedback resistor, and Bob's your uncle. It's not a perfect signal source, but it'll probably have less residual distortion than most of the stuff you're measuring. For mike pres, use a good-quality passive DI (I've found those contribute very little extra distortion in HF IM tests, and my guess is that they'll do the same in a DIM test). Peace, Paul |
#8
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I wrote:
- The M Audio "Flying Calf" A/D converter, surprisingly, held its own against far more expensive converters, while the D/A section of the "Flying Cow" converter was not nearly as good--though my "Cow" is an older model, and the chips (cow chips?) in their newer models have a higher specification. whereupon Arny Krueger wrote: There are also some board layout changes too, which may make for a change in stability. I tested two different revisions of the Flying Cow: http://www.pcavtech.com/adc-dac/Cow/index.htm The "Revision E" was pretty impressive, and says a lot for the philosophy of continual evolutionary upgrades at M-Audio, The Cow that I tested has a Rev. E board also. Its D/A wasn't nearly as clean as, for example, the line output of a ~$100, 10-year-old Sony D-131 "Discman" portable CD player(!). I didn't test the Cow's A/D section. The product that did test well from this series was a "Flying Calf" A/D, labeled on the outside as the 20-bit version of this product and having a "Rev. A" circuit board, also (c) 1997. It actually held its own fairly well against a Lucid AD 9624 and a somewhat older Mytek (model AD 2018). Perhaps the A/D section of the Flying Cow would have done equally well. --best regards P.S.: The equipment that I tested was all my own stuff, which I bought at various times for various amounts, under various suppositions as to what level of performance each piece of equipment would offer. I have to admit that I found I had a real "vested interest" in the outcome of these tests--I really wanted to see each piece of equipment perform as well or as badly I had thought it should do. This turned out not always to be the case. And after I had made graphs of the noise and distortion for seven or eight preamps, for example, at some moments I found myself staring again and again at certain graphs, looking for the evidence that I felt _had_ to be there establishing the superiority or inferiority of one or another item. I really wanted the (x) preamp to be better than the (y) preamp, say, in part because I was prepared to feel cool using preamp (x) at recording jobs, etc. It was disturbing to have to accept that my mental picture of a product's level of quality can be quite mistaken and even inauthentic, i.e. formed on the basis of a product's "public image" (e.g. in this newsgroup) and, perhaps, the "back story" of how I came to own it, for example. It really took me by surprise how much all that cr@p still persists in my way of thinking. Maybe I'm human after all ... |
#9
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"David Satz" wrote in message
om I wrote: - The M Audio "Flying Calf" A/D converter, surprisingly, held its own against far more expensive converters, while the D/A section of the "Flying Cow" converter was not nearly as good--though my "Cow" is an older model, and the chips (cow chips?) in their newer models have a higher specification. whereupon Arny Krueger wrote: There are also some board layout changes too, which may make for a change in stability. I tested two different revisions of the Flying Cow: http://www.pcavtech.com/adc-dac/Cow/index.htm The "Revision E" was pretty impressive, and says a lot for the philosophy of continual evolutionary upgrades at M-Audio, The Cow that I tested has a Rev. E board also. Its D/A wasn't nearly as clean as, for example, the line output of a ~$100, 10-year-old Sony D-131 "Discman" portable CD player(!). I tested a number of Sony Discman players and posted the results at http://www.pcavtech.com/play-rec/summary/index.htm None of them came close to a Rev E Flying Cow, nor was it a fair comparison given that the Cow was capable of handling 24 bit data, and any CD player is limited to less than 16 bits worth of actual performance. I didn't test the Cow's A/D section. My tests are for loop-back, so the noise and distortion of both are represented by one test and one set of performance numbers. |
#11
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Dave,
the DIM 30 test signal as you described it passes through a 30 kHz low pass filter. Therefore almost any square wave signal generator will have a suffienctly fast rise and fall time i.e. slew rate for this test since it will be limited by the 30 kHz LPF anyway. What makes you think the slew rate of your test signal was not good enough? How did you generate the square wave? Even if you had a "perfect"square wave, after passing through a 30 kHz LPF it will have only a modest slew rate. Mark |
#12
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On 14 Apr 2005 19:40:17 -0700, "Mark" wrote:
the DIM 30 test signal as you described it passes through a 30 kHz low pass filter. Therefore almost any square wave signal generator will have a suffienctly fast rise and fall time i.e. slew rate for this test since it will be limited by the 30 kHz LPF anyway. It's certainly scary that David's tests found so many mic preamps that performed so poorly. It's just these (un)bandwidth-limited locations that are at greatest risk of out-of-band overloads. Mic preamps, D/A summing junctions and phono equalizers are the unsung Davids in the world of out-of-band Goliaths. Most modern electronics lives and works behind a wall of low-pass filtering, so let's all give thanks and appreciation to the front line soldiers who don't. And there's another category of "things that get bumped in the night", the digital LPF. There's lots to be learned about 'em, but it won't be from me, sadly. They may even exhibit their own "TIM". And I don't mean Burton. Chomps cigar. Chris Hornbeck 6x9=42 April 29 |
#13
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Harry Houdini wrote:
David, Dynamic distortion - something I've been thinking about recently too. Too bad this specification doesn't make the A-list in most manufacturer literature. AFAIK, dynamic distortion has no formal definition. TIM & SID have been studied to death and found to be the same as high frequency nonlinear distortion. Probably the best way to measure high frequency nonlinear distortion is a high frequency twin tone test, such as equal parts of 18 & 20 KHz sine waves. Analyze the output with a spectrum analyzer. Look at the sidebands that are generated, if any. |
#14
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Chris Hornbeck wrote:
On 14 Apr 2005 19:40:17 -0700, "Mark" wrote: the DIM 30 test signal as you described it passes through a 30 kHz low pass filter. Therefore almost any square wave signal generator will have a suffienctly fast rise and fall time i.e. slew rate for this test since it will be limited by the 30 kHz LPF anyway. It's certainly scary that David's tests found so many mic preamps that performed so poorly. It's just these (un)bandwidth-limited locations that are at greatest risk of out-of-band overloads. I'm not surprised a bit. An excellent rough test is just to run a 1 KHz square wave through a given piece of equipment and eyeball it on a scope. The square wave calibrator on a Tek scope works well enough for the job. You would not _believe_ how nasty things look going through some of the inexpensive fake tube preamps. Not to mention some of the cheap microphone transformers out there. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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