Audio Analyzer Measurement Description

Audio Analyzer Measurement Description

Last updated: January 16, 2009

How is an analog audio measurement made?

The Audio Analyzer can measure Audio Level (V), SINAD (dB), Distortion (%), and Audio Frequency. Measurements are made through the test set's front panel AUDIO IN connectors. When measuring a mobile's audio output, the audio signal may come from either an acoustic coupler or from a test interface connection to the mobile's audio circuitry.

See Audio Analyzer Block Diagram .

The AUDIO IN connectors feed the inputs to a floating-input differential amplifier, with each input having an impedance of about 100,000 ohms to chassis ground. For best noise immunity, connect the audio signal and its ground reference to the two input ports through shielded coaxial cables, or input the signal to the AUDIO IN HI connector and ground the AUDIO IN LO connector's center contact.

None of the analog audio measurement results are affected by the Amplitude Offset setting.

SINAD/Distortion State

Select On or Off to enable or disable the SINAD and Distortion measurements. When On, these measurement results are displayed below the Audio Level measurement and the SINAD/Distortion Fundamental Frequency must be entered to specify the audio frequency for the measurement (range: 100 Hz to 10 kHz). When Off, four dashes are displayed in place of the measurement results.

Audio Frequency State

Select On or Off to enable or disable the Audio Frequency measurement.

Filter Type

  • None - no filtering is provided (default).
  • 100 Hz BW Band Pass Filter (Tunable) - The 100 Hz BW BPF Center Frequency setting is available when this filter is selected, and can be set in the range of 300 Hz to 15 kHz.
  • C-Message
  • 50 Hz to 15 kHz
  • 300 Hz to 15 kHz

Detector Type

Select either Peak or RMS (default) for making and displaying an Audio Level measurement (does not affect other measurements). The type of detector selected is displayed next to the Audio Level measurement results. A 1-volt rms sinewave input signal would measure 1.414 V Peak when the Peak detector is used. A 1-volt peak input signal would measure 0.707 V RMS when the RMS detector is used.

Expected Peak Voltage

The Expected Amplitude sets the analog audio clipping level and must be set. This voltage is always the absolute peak audio input signal voltage expected at the AUDIO IN connectors, and must be in the range of 7.07 mV peak (5 mVrms) to 20 V peak . Remember, measuring a 1-volt rms sinewave input signal would require a 1.414 V peak expected voltage value to avoid clipping (over-driving) the input.

De-Emphasis State

Set to On or Off (default) to enable or disable 750 microsecond de-emphasis.

Expandor Reference Level

Set value from 10 mV/kHz to 10 V/kHz, or Off (default). Entering a numeric value automatically turns the state to On. Entering Off disables the expandor (state = off).

Trigger Source

Audio Analyzer measurements use immediate triggering and are continuously re-triggered by the analyzer any time the Trigger Arm parameter is set to Continuous. Trigger timing is independent of any mobile protocol signaling.

Related Topics


Audio Analyzer Block Diagram

AFANalyzer Troubleshooting

Audio Level Measurement Description

Audio Frequency Measurement Description

SINAD Measurement Description

Distortion Measurement Description

Programming an Audio Frequency Measurement

Programming an Audio Level Measurement

Programming a SINAD Measurement

Programming a Distortion Measurement

Statistical Measurement Results (Multi-measurements)

Triggering of Measurements

Measurement Timeouts