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X32 Discussion
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<blockquote data-quote="Dan Mortensen" data-source="post: 123255" data-attributes="member: 2826"><p>Re: CARE TEAM - need help. Audio Dropouts on AES50</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>What I think I know is sourced from exactly what Tim calls out. I have exactly no knowledge from text books or physics classes. 15 months ago I knew precisely zero about the subject, and what I think I know now disagrees with your earlier post.</p><p></p><p>I believe the second quoted point above (electrical change with cable movement), but you didn't mention it in your earlier post, and that is the problem that Dan Mc is having now and which I went looking to solve at my workshop a year ago. That problem seems to have nothing to do with anything you mentioned in the earlier post.</p><p></p><p>The only meter I had available was not relevant to this problem, the Fluke DTX-1800, which was something like $10-20k, depending on accessories. It only did static tests and could tell us nothing about the conditions within moving cables or the specifically the interaction between moving pairs within a cable. (It was generously loaned to me by Fluke to prepare for my workshop and I don't have it any more although I wish I did.)</p><p></p><p>None of the Fluke guys (who I asked my Fluke guy to ask) could name a meter that would measure changing conditions in real time; what do you use for that, which lets you see the changing conditions between pairs within a dynamically changing cable? It seemed like there must be something, but people who knew a lot more about the subject than me said there wasn't such a thing and I was forced to believe them.</p><p></p><p>Answering that question would advance this discussion a lot. </p><p></p><p>Like I said, I'm not trying to start a fight but to find out the truth, and I didn't feel anything in your earlier post was useful for Dan Mc's point and my earlier looks into a similar situation.</p><p></p><p>I won't question that you have much more experience in networking than I, since that is easy to do, but apparently I have much more in X32 and SuperMac networking than you. Obviously, I don't have all the answers, either.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dan Mortensen, post: 123255, member: 2826"] Re: CARE TEAM - need help. Audio Dropouts on AES50 What I think I know is sourced from exactly what Tim calls out. I have exactly no knowledge from text books or physics classes. 15 months ago I knew precisely zero about the subject, and what I think I know now disagrees with your earlier post. I believe the second quoted point above (electrical change with cable movement), but you didn't mention it in your earlier post, and that is the problem that Dan Mc is having now and which I went looking to solve at my workshop a year ago. That problem seems to have nothing to do with anything you mentioned in the earlier post. The only meter I had available was not relevant to this problem, the Fluke DTX-1800, which was something like $10-20k, depending on accessories. It only did static tests and could tell us nothing about the conditions within moving cables or the specifically the interaction between moving pairs within a cable. (It was generously loaned to me by Fluke to prepare for my workshop and I don't have it any more although I wish I did.) None of the Fluke guys (who I asked my Fluke guy to ask) could name a meter that would measure changing conditions in real time; what do you use for that, which lets you see the changing conditions between pairs within a dynamically changing cable? It seemed like there must be something, but people who knew a lot more about the subject than me said there wasn't such a thing and I was forced to believe them. Answering that question would advance this discussion a lot. Like I said, I'm not trying to start a fight but to find out the truth, and I didn't feel anything in your earlier post was useful for Dan Mc's point and my earlier looks into a similar situation. I won't question that you have much more experience in networking than I, since that is easy to do, but apparently I have much more in X32 and SuperMac networking than you. Obviously, I don't have all the answers, either. [/QUOTE]
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