John Curl's Blowtorch preamplifier part III

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No, it does not.
A 1khz sine sampled at 2k can be captured every zero crossing.

I said nothing of complicated...


When I used "complicated" I meant to boil down a common thrust in way too many of these arguments: music is constantly changing; static measurements or sampling or some other evil force can't capture it. Etcetera, etcetera, as Yul B put it.


The exceptions to sampling seem to always involve a violation of Nyquist, but they go on year after year. Folks with a real interest would be more fruitful if they were attacking issues of bandlimiting, IMO of course. Nyquist is settled law.


All good fortune,
Chris
 
The exceptions to sampling seem to always involve a violation of Nyquist, but they go on year after year. Folks with a real interest would be more fruitful if they were attacking issues of bandlimiting, IMO of course. Nyquist is settled law.


All good fortune,
Chris

No one.. not me. is suggesting violating Nyquist. A higher sampling rate is needed and for good reason.


THx-RNMarsh
 
Yes, it does violate Nyquist, which requires the sampling rate to be greater than (note: *not* equal) twice highest frequency of interest.

We're talking about the limits of the theory so you mean 22.049999kHz is OK? It's a continuum, as you approach the Nyquist limit it takes forever to reconstruct the signal. This is not of much practical interest in audio IMO. There is little or no information at frequencies near or beyond 22.05kHz and there are several controlled studies that show the brickwall filtering is not audible.
 
Let's scale it up to Red Book in order to use existing commonly available data. Harmonic distortion at full scale 20kHz or nearabouts - very small distortion numbers - and the same for 19/20 IMD.


As strange and unbelievable as it sounds, perfect (ideally, of course) sampling and reconstruction of a bandlimited and dithered signal is possible, as long as Nyquist isn't violated. I didn't believe it myself until I'd drawn it all out with pencil and paper.


Always the best,
Chris
 
It is unworthy of you, sir.

tip: Explain to me how you can sample half a period with sampling at twice its frequency. With a little drawing, for those who, like me, have, um, difficulty understanding ?

I just did please try to understand the concept of limits and numbers that are expressed as the sum of an infinite series, etc. or values that are expressed as integrals from plus to minus infinity.
 
I just did please try to understand the concept of limits and numbers that are expressed as the sum of an infinite series, etc. or values that are expressed as integrals from plus to minus infinity.
You overlook the fact that the ear does not work like a microphone followed by a brick wall filter. And I thank you very much for examining the waveform of the impact of a drummer stick on the bell of a cymbal.
There are a few reasons why the music industry is increasingly moving towards higher sampling frequencies. And it's not just because it looks prettier on a datasheet.

Examining the arguments of each other with the alder of his sympathies is not a very scientific approach. Refer to a theory while neglecting the context in which it is called either.
 
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You go ahead and try, perhaps that exercise will show where your confusion lies. You may find you need an infinite time to build the spreadsheet.
You provided no proof, no graphs, no visuals.

When I claimed a shorting ring lowered inductance and increased resistive losses, I lathed a brass, aluminum, and steel ring, measured the impact on a voice coil, then slit the ring to measure bulk eddy losses.

Actual measurements, actual build of hardware, proof. That is how I roll.

I would hope for the same from you.

I am not confused by the theory...just by your statements.
Jn
 
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