[sdiy] High input impedance -- bad ?
Jerry Gray-Eskue
jerryge at cableone.net
Tue Feb 16 15:19:33 CET 2010
Your observation seems good so far.
The other consideration is that higher impedance requires more current gain
in your input stage.
(High impedance and high gain are characteristics of radio receiver front
ends.)
The side effect is that in addition to the stray internal currents and
offset voltages on the input are a larger component of the output signals.
O'scopes tend to have very high input impedance and require special
attention to the input buffers to keep the signal to noise ratio high.
I think it is a matter of trade offs, using lower input impedance it is
easier to keep a good signal to noise ratio, higher input impedance loads
the signal source less and with additional care to preserve the signal
integrity result in a more accurate signal path.
-Jerry
-----Original Message-----
From: synth-diy-bounces at dropmix.xs4all.nl
[mailto:synth-diy-bounces at dropmix.xs4all.nl]On Behalf Of Andre Majorel
Sent: Tuesday, February 16, 2010 5:59 AM
To: synth-diy at dropmix.xs4all.nl
Subject: [sdiy] High input impedance -- bad ?
Are there any drawbacks to giving inputs high (say 1 M) input
impedances ?
I realise that the higher the input impedance, the more EMI you
catch but if what's at the other end of the patch cord has a low
output impedance, won't it shunt the EMI to ground ?
--
André Majorel http://www.teaser.fr/~amajorel/
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