
mshilarious
Banned
Those pictures are working OK. This board is shot though, we need to find somewhere new to argue!
So, anyway, yes that is exactly what you'd expect from a 44.1 or 48kHz digital system. At double speed you'll get an extra harmonic, see my Excel sheet for appearance. I call it a "molar" wave.
It's kind of funny that you are now saying that digital turns everything to sine waves when at the beginning people were saying digital turns everything to squares. It can't be both! The reality is digital applies a hard bandwidth limit to a signal; together with a tiny wee bit of aliasing and possibly some measureable jitter that's about all it does.
The problem with the wave view on that scope is you can't see distortion until it exceeds 1% or so. Now, obviously at 10kHz if there was distortion it would have to be 20kHz, which is asymmetrical and thus less likely than 3rd, which of course the system shouldn't pass. Also it's really hard to see aliasing or jitter because those tend to be <0.01%, usually much less. In an old DAT machine though I dunno, those might not test as well.
This is where an FFT is quite useful.
So, anyway, yes that is exactly what you'd expect from a 44.1 or 48kHz digital system. At double speed you'll get an extra harmonic, see my Excel sheet for appearance. I call it a "molar" wave.
It's kind of funny that you are now saying that digital turns everything to sine waves when at the beginning people were saying digital turns everything to squares. It can't be both! The reality is digital applies a hard bandwidth limit to a signal; together with a tiny wee bit of aliasing and possibly some measureable jitter that's about all it does.
The problem with the wave view on that scope is you can't see distortion until it exceeds 1% or so. Now, obviously at 10kHz if there was distortion it would have to be 20kHz, which is asymmetrical and thus less likely than 3rd, which of course the system shouldn't pass. Also it's really hard to see aliasing or jitter because those tend to be <0.01%, usually much less. In an old DAT machine though I dunno, those might not test as well.
This is where an FFT is quite useful.