CAIG 3 HTML
A Clean Audio Installation Guide™
3.0 INTERCONNECTION SYSTEMS
The 600 ohm power matched system developed by the Bell System
for the telephone industry is falling from favor, and should have
long ago. With modern amplifier technology it is no longer necessary,
nor desirable, to terminate audio lines with a "matched"
low impedance, except with very long interconnects (1/10
3.1 Interconnect Bandwidth
To understand this last statement, one needs to see that the output impedance of a piece of audio equipment combines with the capacitance of the interconnect cable to form an R-C low pass filter. For example, assume a circuit with 1000 feet of shielded pair (oft-times found with TV remotes) whose capacitance is 32 pF per ft between conductors, a drive impedance of 600 ohm and a bridging (100k ohm input. The high frequency small signal cutoff of the interconnect is 8.34 kHz! Not exactly HI-FI. (See figure 2)
Figure 2 - INTERCONNECT LOW PASS FILTER With the line terminated in 600 ohm, the situation improves to 16.68 kHz but is still nowhere near what we are looking for in the demanding world of high quality audio. By dropping the source impedance to 60 ohm, the small signal bandwidth of our interconnect moves out to 83.4 kHz, an even better situation. If we use 1000 feet of Mogami 2944A cable at 6 pF per ft then our small signal bandwidth will move further out to 442 kHz. This is a greatly improved condition, but it is still not the total story, as we shall see in a minute. The above calculation for Fc is found by;
[1.0] Where:
R is the output impedance (60 ohm), Our tests indicate that an 80 to 90 ohm source yields a maximally flat response. Lower source impedances will result in high frequency peaking because of series inductance in the cable, not accounted for in our simplified equivalent circuit. However, the best compromise between bandwidth and high end response, even though some peaking takes place at the very highest frequencies (above 100 kHz), is 60 ohms.
3.2 Interconnect Slew Rate
[2.0] Where:
SR = Slew Rate =
The amount of current that is required to feed the cable, or in fact any capacitance, is given by;
[2.1]
3.2.1 System References
While the dBu may not be a broadly recognized standard, it is an official standard among the Nordic countries in Europe. It is found in Nordic N-10 standard. Also, its common usage, particularly in Europe, causes us to accept it as the most logical way to define the voltage reference that relates to the power matched system. Occasionally, in some of our older documentation, the term dBv will be seen. This has the same meaning as dBu. Other authors will use dB/.7 or dB/0.775 to indicate the same voltage reference. One Japanese manufacturer uses the term dBs. And now back to our cable problem.
3.3 A Cable Problem
[3.0a] Therefore:
[3.0b]
Solution 1
SR = 2 x 3.14 x 30,000 Hz x 21.85 V SR = 4.119 x 106 volts per sec (or 4.119 volts per micro-second) Solution 2 +30 dBu out = 24.50 volts RMS, peak output of 34.69 volts. Therefore: SR = 6.529 x 106 volts per sec SR = 6.529 V/µ sec Now that we know the slew rate needed to meet our desired conditions, let's calculate the current necessary to feed the line. We recall from our earlier work that 1000 feet of cable has a capacitance of 32 nanofarads (32 pF per foot), and,
[3.1] Therefore: I = 32 x 10-9 x 4.119 x 106 I = 131.8 milliamps @ +30 dBu out, I = 32 x 10-9 x 6.429 x 106 I = 208.9 mA Multiple cables fed from a DA, of course, multiply the total current drain from a unit. Let's suppose that we wish to drive our line with SMPTE time code and that a 100 kHz full voltage output is deemed necessary to preserve waveform integrity. SR = 2 x 3.14 x 100,000 Hz x 21.85 volts SR = 13.73 x 106 volts per sec @ + 30 dBu SR = 21.76 x 106 volts per sec In this case our line length must be limited to considerably less than 1000 feet. If we want a full output to 100 kHz, then we really need a small signal interconnect bandwidth of at least 300 kHz. This limits the total cable capacitance to 8.84 x 10-9 Farads. At 32 pF per foot, the maximum cable length we can use is 276 feet. The current required is: @+26 dBu out,
I = 121.4 mA @ = 30 dBu out, I = 192.4 mA If longer cable lengths are required, low capacitance cable is the only alternative. Mogami 2944A shielded pair at 6 pF/ft allows almost 1500 feet of cable to be used and still meet the above criteria.
3.4 A Second Cable Problem
Solution
We already found that +26 dBu at 30 kHz represents a slew rate of 4.110 x 106 volts per sec; rewriting an earlier equation:
[4.0] Therefore:
C = 9.711 x 10-9 Farads C = 9.711 nF (max.) At 32 pF per foot we find a maximum of 303.5 feet of cable is permissible. With Mogami 2944A @ 6 pF per foot we find 1619 feet of cable may be used. If the equipment is capable of + 30 dBu out, then only 6.127 nF, or 191.5 feet of cable or 1021 feet of the Mogami 2944A, may be used.
3.5 System Frequency Response
It is important to recognize the difference between the small signal bandwidth of an interconnect and its slew rate limitations. Small signal bandwidth sets the 3 dB cutoff of the interconnect filter, which in turn describes the flatness and phase response back at 20 kHz. It must be remembered that every element of an audio system will contribute it's 3 dB cutoff and associated phase shift to the overall performance of the system. Every element must be viewed as one section of a large multi-pole low pass filter; and while one element may have adequate response to 30 or 40 kHz, it is the cumulative effect of these filter sections that is of major concern. At first glance, the proclaimed need for a wide bandwidth of 200 kHz in both the equipment and the interconnect may seem outlandish. However, when you realize that television stations and networks, for instance, may have from ten to twenty or even more pieces of equipment in the audio chain, each contributing its cutoff characteristics, we begin to realize the magnitude of the problem in achieving adequate high frequency performance through the system. If a piece of equipment or an interconnect has a 100 kHz bandwidth and has a simple single-pole, 6 dB per octave roll off (often only true for interconnects), the following chart can be used to estimate the system roll off.
Manufacturers of audio equipment have for years mistakenly considered an upper bandwidth of 20 to 30 kHz to be totally adequate for their equipment. This narrow viewpoint, of course, fails to see their equipment as an element in a long chain, and potentially the limiting element. While we will actually never "use" - that is, put a signal into that upper portion of the 200 kHz bandwidth - it must exist to achieve the necessary 30 to 40 kHz system bandwidth. We have often been told that "an audio chain is only as strong as its weakest link" - would that it were as strong as its weakest link. Slew rate limitations, on the other hand, are large voltage swing limitations and again, have to do with the actual current output required of a stage that is driving a capacitance. It is important that no amplifier be allowed to slew limit. To do so produces high frequency intermodulation distortion. If an amplifier can provide adequate current to a cable to allow full output swing to 30 kHz at low THD, the chances are practically nil that it will ever slew limit with normal audio.
3.6 Interconnect Rules
One word of caution concerning distribution amplifiers is in order. A number of manufacturers of DAs have been changing over to a 60 ohm output impedance. However, in many cases the conversion consists of simply removing 300 ohm build out resistors and replacing them with 30 ohm resistors without regard to the possible output current demands that can occur. If we establish as a criteria the need to be able to support a third of a DA's outputs in a short circuit condition, remembering that a DA is an insurance policy, then, for a DA that uses resistive splits and 10 outputs, 3 shorted outputs represents a 10 ohm load on each of the two output legs. As a result, upwards of 3 amps peak output current capability is needed from the DAs. This drive capability is in addition to that required to feed cable capacitance. It is a rare DA that can handle this type of current demand. One shorted 60 ohm output should be reflected as only a 0.02 dB drop in amplitude at the other outputs operating at maximum output amplitude. If a distribution amplifier will not provide this degree of isolation, the question must be asked, "Is this truly a distribution amplifier?", for is not the whole purpose of a DA to provide isolation?
3.7 Amplitude Advantages
+8 dBu (system average) + 16 dB (peak to average) +6 dB (for no termination) = +30 dBu peak out When you understand that a unity gain differential (op-amp) input stage running from ± 15 volt supplies (typical for many pieces of equipment) clips at about +21 dBu, and the input clip of a properly designed input stage operating from the same ± 15 volt supply rails is +26 to +27 dBu, you begin to see the need for reducing that last 6 dB term.
Go to: Section 4.0
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or greater). The foil-shielded
audio cable that we use today does not have a characteristic
line impedance of 600 ohm but rather near 100 ohm, or below. The
true audio transmission line is rare and typically will only exist
with the telephone company, very large networks, stadiums, and
various military installations. It is possible to see the effects
of unterminated cable at one tenth of a wavelength, at the highest
frequency of interest (20 kHz) - i.e. approx. 3250' if the velocity-of-propagation
constant is 0.65. In practice, with runs of 2000' or more, it
might be best approached from a power matched transmission line
perspective. But to do so, the correct impedance of the cable
should be determined (usually between 50-90 ohm, and proper interface provided.
, a change in voltage with respect to time,





