Line level for "pro" equipment is generally considered to be a nominal 
(average) level of +4 dBu, 
where 0 dBu = 0.78 volts rms. For typical, uncompressed speech, the rms value 
of a sine wave equal 
to the peaks is usually about 10 dB higher than the average level. Compression 
or limiting will 
generally reduce that difference to about 6 dB. Translating that to volts, +4 
dBu is about 1.23 volts, 6 
dB more is 2.5 volts, 10 dB above +4 is 3.9 volts. The key number there is the 
peak value of the 
waveform at clip, which is 1.414 x 3.9 volts = 5.5 volts. So an output stage 
(or input stage) that handles 
line level would expect to see a peak to peak swing of 11 volts with a nominal 
line level signal. But VU 
meters often swing against the peg, so we need some "headroom" -- another 6-10 
dB "just in case."  
6 dB more is double the voltage, so that's 22 volts peak to peak. 

For consumer (home) equipment, the "nominal" level is roughly 300 mV, with 
peaks of 1-2 volts.  The 
same math applies, except that virtually all pre-recorded music has already 
been subjected to 
considerable peak limiting and compression, so "headroom" is less important. 

BTW -- forget all that ancient stuff about 600 ohms. Pro audio hasn't used a 
600 ohm reference for at 
least four decades. 600 ohms came from the characteristic impedance of 
telegraph lines between 
cities (spaced at a foot or so) where lines were long enough that they needed 
to be treated as 
transmission lines. Audio lines are almost never that long (4000 ft or more).  
Besides, the 
characteristic impedance of audio cable is on the order of 60-80 ohms (do the 
math on conductor size 
and spacing), so if termination WERE used, that's the value that would be 
required! Modern audio 
gear has a low (50-100 ohm) output impedance and a high (10K typical) input 
impedance. Mic input 
stages have a much lower input impedance (1K typical) to maximize signal to 
noise. 

Jim Brown  K9YC
http:audiosystemsgroup.com 

 On Thu, 1 Jul 2004 19:44:45 EDT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

>When an input to, or output from an audio device is specified as being  "line 
>level", what exactly does that mean? Is it a specific RMS voltage perhaps?  
>Its a term that I've heard bandied about over the years but either never knew, 
> 
>or have forgotten the precise meaning.


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