The title just about says it.
As we know, inductors introduce considerable phase distortion into signals, and the phase lag is different at various frequencies. I'm interested in learning more about all of this. I see no references on line that are related to this other than what is out there about audio transformers and large power transformers.
My interest goes back to George Cardas' comments about my Litz wire pickups probably having better group delay characteristics based on my subjective observation of tighter "faster" low end response. I'd like to get beyond the subjective and into real measurements with this.
Time/phase is the 3rd dimension in audio...the depth behind ordinary magnitude measurements. Not all frequencies pass through audio systems at the same rate...that is a simple fact...and I think it greatly affects what we hear.
One idea is to compare the impulse response of a magnetic pickup vs. piezo, perhaps using a string pulled by a breaking loop magnet wire (a very repeatable string pluck method). Would Lissajous 'scope testing with the input signal to a send coil and the output of the pickup be sufficient to see phase shift at different frequencies? Does the signal send coil itself distort what one might see? Should the signal send coil be some rational fraction of the inductance of the pickup coil(s) under test?
Any thoughts?
I hope this is not too scientific... :-)
As we know, inductors introduce considerable phase distortion into signals, and the phase lag is different at various frequencies. I'm interested in learning more about all of this. I see no references on line that are related to this other than what is out there about audio transformers and large power transformers.
My interest goes back to George Cardas' comments about my Litz wire pickups probably having better group delay characteristics based on my subjective observation of tighter "faster" low end response. I'd like to get beyond the subjective and into real measurements with this.
Time/phase is the 3rd dimension in audio...the depth behind ordinary magnitude measurements. Not all frequencies pass through audio systems at the same rate...that is a simple fact...and I think it greatly affects what we hear.
One idea is to compare the impulse response of a magnetic pickup vs. piezo, perhaps using a string pulled by a breaking loop magnet wire (a very repeatable string pluck method). Would Lissajous 'scope testing with the input signal to a send coil and the output of the pickup be sufficient to see phase shift at different frequencies? Does the signal send coil itself distort what one might see? Should the signal send coil be some rational fraction of the inductance of the pickup coil(s) under test?
Any thoughts?
I hope this is not too scientific... :-)
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