A
Al in Dallas
Guest
On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 00:23:33 GMT, Rich Grise <rich@example.net> wrote:
--
Al in St. Lou
I think you've hit the nail on the head.On Fri, 28 Sep 2007 15:20:58 -0700, zhafran wrote:
On Sep 29, 12:03 am, Rich Grise <r...@example.net> wrote:
On Fri, 28 Sep 2007 05:41:54 +0000, Michael Black wrote:
Rich Grise (r...@example.net) writes:
On Wed, 26 Sep 2007 02:11:12 +0000, Michael Black wrote:
As someone pointed out, another method of getting rid of the DC
component is to feed the other side of the speaker with an out of
phase audio signal:
Audio ---------------AMP1 --
| speaker
|--inverter----AMP2---
Geez! Inverted is not equal to "out of phase". They're precisely in
phase, simply of opposite polarities.
Please don't confuse the newbies.
So which part are you taking issue with?
Using the term "out of phase" when there is no phase difference.
Imagine a pulse train:
_ _ _
__________| |__________| |__________| |_____
THIS is 180 degrees out of phase:
_ _ _
___| |__________| |__________| |_____
THIS is merely inverted:
__________ __________ __________ ______
|_| |_| |_|
Get it now?
I'm just confuse about some basics here. can the 2 sinusoidal waves that
is 180 degrees out of phase with each other be said as inverted? and, for
waveforms other than sinusoidal shape is not necessarily inverted when
they are 180 degrees out of phase?
To invert a signal, you run it through an inverter, To phase shift it, you
run it through some sort of phase shift network; this will be frequency-
sensitive, depending on the frequency and the parameters of your phase
shifter.
And anyone who tells you that an inversion is the same as a 180 degree
phase shift just wasn't paying attention in class that day.
Admittedly, with a sine wave, they LOOK exactly the same; this is
probably the confusion factor for those who don't know the difference
yet.
--
Al in St. Lou