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Registered Member #134
Joined: Fri Feb 10 2006, 10:44PM
Location: Belgium
Posts: 86
Hi,
I recently found some schematics to build a very simple acoustic voltmeter. It's basically a device built around two BC547 transistors which 'converts voltage to sound'. Doing that, you can hear the voltage, and, according to the author of the article (which was covered in Elektor), it's possible - with some training of course - to be able to tell how high the voltage is, which waveform it has etc... just by listening.
Has anyone got any experience with such a device? I'll probably build one soon, but I am not in the mood right now
Registered Member #177
Joined: Wed Feb 15 2006, 02:16PM
Location: Munich, Germany
Posts: 214
Well, it is actually just a VCO, a voltage controlled oscillator. Its a nice starter project und can be handy if you don't have much space and you only have to know rhougly what voltage is applied.
Although, they are a nice way to transmit a voltage from point A to B if you have a precise Freq to Voltage converter. Better then your ears that is.
Registered Member #65
Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 06:43AM
Location:
Posts: 1155
This is fun too (free): "Oscilloscope for Windows is a Windows application that converts your PC into a powerful dual-trace oscilloscope. Oscilloscope uses your PC's sound card as an Analog-to-Digital Converter (ADC) to digitize any input waveform (speech, music, electric signal, etc.) and then presents it on the monitor in real time, allowing the user to control the display in the same way as on a conventional "standalone" scope, for example change gain, timebase or plot Lissajous patterns." ( )
2914 and 2915 level LED level chips are a classic too, Cheers,
Registered Member #134
Joined: Fri Feb 10 2006, 10:44PM
Location: Belgium
Posts: 86
Fun too, and free, if you can trust yourself not to connect anything too nasty to your soundcard, and don't mind low frequency...
Indeed; I once tried that winscope-thing and fried a (very old) sound card (It was my own fault, though, I connected a 21V AC transformer directly to the thing ; yeah, those were the old days )
Registered Member #27
Joined: Fri Feb 03 2006, 02:20AM
Location: Hyperborea
Posts: 2058
The idea is very useful because you can hear things that are impossible to see on a regular oscilloscope. I have several times debugged strange problems by listening to signals that looked perfect but had regular distortions that were audible.
Registered Member #15
Joined: Thu Feb 02 2006, 01:11PM
Location:
Posts: 3068
Bjørn Bæverfjord wrote ...
The idea is very useful because you can hear things that are impossible to see on a regular oscilloscope. I have several times debugged strange problems by listening to signals that looked perfect but had regular distortions that were audible.
This probably do to the fact that those regular distortions occurred at a frequency interval other than that being triggered. If you were monitoring a 100kHz signal, for example, you would never be able to "see" a distortion with a rep rate of say 800Hz, etc...
Registered Member #134
Joined: Fri Feb 10 2006, 10:44PM
Location: Belgium
Posts: 86
Or a pakaderm...?
What's a pakaderm?
The idea is very useful because you can hear things that are impossible to see on a regular oscilloscope. I have several times debugged strange problems by listening to signals that looked perfect but had regular distortions that were audible.
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