Audio Level Measurement Description

 Last updated: October 28, 2004

 

How is an Audio Level measurement made?

 Audio Level measures the AC voltage of the signal applied to the front-panel AUDIO IN connectors, and is one of the Audio Analyzer measurements. Audio Level can be measured for signals in the frequency range of
100 Hz to 20 kHz, at levels from 1 mV peak to 20V peak . The measurement is made after any filtering is applied, and can be made using an rms or peak detector. The type of detector being used for the measurement is displayed next to the measurement value.

 When measuring very low voltages, it may be helpful to use the Audio Analyzer's adjustable bandpass filter and the rms detector to reduce noise components.

 For information on using the Audio Analyzer, see Audio Analyzer Measurement Description .

 This measurement is not affected by the Amplitude Offset setting.

 

Considerations When Making Manual Audio Level Measurements

 When manually controlling the test set from the front panel, all measurements default to using continuous triggering. If you make digital measurements on a DTC using RF Rise or Protocol triggering, and then hand off to an AVC and select an analog measurement, the analog measurement may not trigger and display a result. This is because the digital measurement is still waiting for a burst transmission to trigger it (which it won't get from an analog signal) and therefore the measurements "freeze". To prevent this from happening when making analog measurements, either turn off the digital measurements or set their trigger source to Immediate.

 

Related Topics


 

Programming an Audio Level Measurement

 AFANalyzer Troubleshooting

 Audio Analyzer Measurement Description

 Audio Analyzer Block Diagram