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Spectralayers signal observed at 60, 180, 300 and up.
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<blockquote data-quote="Rob Timmerman" data-source="post: 216420" data-attributes="member: 172"><p>A square wave (such as you might get from clipping the signal, either intentionally as an effect, or unintentionally due to poor gain structure), consists of the odd-order harmonics of the fundamental signal in the ration of 1/n, where n is the order of the harmonic. So a 60hz square wave could be constructed by summing a 60hz sine wave, a 180hz sine wave at 4.5dB down, a 300hz sine wave at 7dB down, and so forth. So the signal you've described as being at "base level at 60hz, then 180 and so on" could easily just be a clipped 60hz signal.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Rob Timmerman, post: 216420, member: 172"] A square wave (such as you might get from clipping the signal, either intentionally as an effect, or unintentionally due to poor gain structure), consists of the odd-order harmonics of the fundamental signal in the ration of 1/n, where n is the order of the harmonic. So a 60hz square wave could be constructed by summing a 60hz sine wave, a 180hz sine wave at 4.5dB down, a 300hz sine wave at 7dB down, and so forth. So the signal you've described as being at "base level at 60hz, then 180 and so on" could easily just be a clipped 60hz signal. [/QUOTE]
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Spectralayers signal observed at 60, 180, 300 and up.
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