On 30 Jan 2007 23:35:13 -0800,
b...@coolgroups.com wrote:
I was just wondering what the typical voltages input to a sound card
are. I want to try to view some signals on my sound card.
Thanks.
If you use the Line In, you can typically apply around 1 Vrms
(just under 3 V peak-to-peak). The mixer input slider
controls will affect this to a certain extent. If you reduce
the slider setting, you may be able to handle somewhat
higher voltages. The sound card chipset can probably
handle 15 V, but better safe than sorry.
The Mic input is typically more sensitive, but usually
has a fairly crappy preamp that rolls off frequencies
above 8 or 9 kHz.
You can use my (shameless plug) Daqarta for Windows
software for viewing signals as waveforms, spectra,
or color spectrograms. It has an Auto-Calibration
feature to determine the relative sensitivity of the
mixer's internal volume controls, so you can adjust
sensitivity in dB. Also has instructions for performing
a simple absolute calibration using only a cheap DMM
(no sensitive AC volts range) and a battery.
(Note: Version 3.03 should be out in a few more days.)
Best regards,
Bob Masta
D A Q A R T A
Data AcQuisition And Real-Time Analysis
www.daqarta.com
Scope, Spectrum, Spectrogram, Signal Generator
Science with your sound card!