hi john,

On 05/22/2013 09:44 PM, John Rigg wrote:
On Wed, May 22, 2013 at 10:38:37AM -0400, Bill Gribble wrote:
There are real effects due to clock jitter on
both the A/D and D/A end that can cause small but measurable
distortions.

Not to mention audible if it's severe enough. Decimation filters
that only give 6 or 12dB attenuation at fs/2 (typical in many pro
audio ADC chips) can allow audible aliasing too. I wouldn't expect
an oscilloscope to have enough resolution to detect these effects,
but a good spectrum analyser and/or a good pair of ears often can.

this comment raised my eyebrows a little bit. can you explain what you mean by "decimation filter"? the way i understand it, decimation means chopping off bits, usually by shifting the data words, and possibly adding dither. how can this be a problem at fs/2? no new frequency components are introduced (apart from additional quantisation noise, which must necessarily be band-limited to fs/2), and the input of the decimation stage will already be band-limited as well.

otoh, if you mean sample rate down-conversion, i understand your comment, but then you picked an unfortunate term. moreover, i'd expect src circuits with only -12dB at fs/s to be unusable in practise, because the aliasing artefacts would be obvious. it means the top octave from 10-20hkz would be polluted with junk at -24 to -12dB, unless of course there are some oversampling tricks going on and the effective fs is higher during down conversion. although i must confess i don't know anything about DAC and SRC design - if someone can explain this in more detail, i'm all ears.

best,


jörn



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