T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2674.1 | Why, they use electronics, that's how they work!
| PIANST::JANZEN | Tom 223-5140 MLO23-1 | Thu Jul 11 1991 13:43 | 28 |
| Ones and zeros. What ones and zeros?
Jesse Norman is singing. At one instant she produces some
a capella sound pressure level near her microphone. The difference
in air pressure around the diaphragm of the mic makes it move.
It moves in an electric or magnetic field depending on the type,
and a voltage or current is generated, respectively. The current
ultimately is measured as a voltage also. The voltage of her voice
in one instant of time goes into a mixer, which these days is
probably digital, and is digitized before mixing.
There are different approaches to conversion, but type an SAR
(successive approximation register)
collects bits that correspond to a binary number in one type of
code or other (two's complement or unsigned binary or 2 or 3 others).
This is written to the tape. Or in the case of records it is encoded
as little square depressions in the wax. No only kidding.
Anyway, the tape is used to make CD's and you buy the CD so why do
you need a DAT?
When you play the day, the binary number, probably normalized
two's copmlement I don't know it doesn't matter (nothing I don't
know matters ;-) typical engineer's arrogance),
is read off the tape and sent in a digital-to-analogue convertor,
which typically assigned different (2**n) weights to the bits in
the word by allowing different amounts of current to flow for each
bit into a summing network which is a varying current and
is detected by an op amp and
amplified into a varying voltage that is amplified even more by
a power amp and drives the speaker da dit da dit da.
Tom
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2674.2 | My Head Itches Too | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG2-2/W10, DTN 226-7556 | Thu Jul 11 1991 13:53 | 2 |
| Uh, could you repeat the question...
|
2674.3 | playback is just esrever of recording | MAJTOM::ROBERT | | Thu Jul 11 1991 13:57 | 31 |
|
Your conception on how the data is converted back to what we hear (analog)
is wrong. It is simply the reverse of how the sound was recorded.
Recording is called Analog to Digital and is done thru ADCs (Analog to Digital
Converters), playback is just Digital to Analog using DACs (you guessed it).
It's basically a stream of digital numbers that represent the amplitude of
the sound wave at specific intervals of time, with some interpolation
between the intervals. The less time between intervals, and hence the
less time the machine has to "make up", the better, which is why faster
sampling rates yield more realistic reproductions of what was recorded.
The standard sampling rate for CDs is 44.1 Khz, DAT I believe is higher,
like 48 Khz.
Of course there's different methods and degrees of quality/accuracy in how
different CDs and DATs interpolate between intervals, do error correction
of incoming data, and convert to analog (ie some manufactures boast 18 bit
DACs, etc) At best they're subtle difference in my opinion. They all sound
great, even the cheapest ones.
If anything, you'll find quality difference in how well they do error
correction, which is why you'll find a CD that plays fine in one player
but skips on another.
This procedure is nothing more that "sampling", and you'll find many
notes in here on sampling/samplers as well as DATs/CDs. Try a DIR/TITLE,
or keywords. (One note that sticks in my mind because of the title is:
DADADADADADADADADADADADADADADDADAD) Also check the AUDIO notesfile.
-TR
|
2674.4 | | HEART::MACHIN | | Fri Jul 12 1991 05:42 | 5 |
| A question for the engineers --
O.K. so what's the latest '1 bit' technology?
Richard.
|
2674.5 | Too tempting to pass up... | TLE::ALIVE::ASHFORTH | Lord, make me an instrument of thy peace | Fri Jul 12 1991 09:04 | 4 |
| Well, I could tell you about my drill, but that would be boring. It's a pretty
sharp topic, though, if you get the point- that's the key issue.
Well, that was bracing; back to work...
|
2674.6 | I can see clearly now.. | NYEM1::RYAN | | Fri Jul 12 1991 13:16 | 9 |
| Thanks for the quick replys, I have a much better understanding of
how these thing now work. The discussion on voltage levels shed a lot
of light....
Now.....about those $200 DAT machines....
Thanks again,
Gary
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