419 AD8Manual
419 AD8Manual
419 AD8Manual
Manual
Users
Manual
Statement of conformity
Swissonic AG
P. O. Box 304
CH-8730 Uznach
Switzerland
Phone +41552858610
Fax
+41552858615
www.swissonic.com
info @ swissonic.com
Swissonic America
407 Stony Point RD
Santa Rosa
CA 95401
Phone 707 577 7691
Fax
707 577 7692
Daniel Feusi
General Manager Swissonic AG
www.swissonic.com
infousa@swissonic.com
5
4
6
7
Package contents
14
9
10
11
12
13
15
16
Features
Rear Panel
Layout AD8 pro
2@6,8k
+12V Clamp
2
+48V
3
1
Phantom power
Normal
Chassis ground
RFI
filter &
protection
@1
+
Switched
20 dB
pad
Figure 1:
AD8 input configuration.
To HPF,
invert stage
and ADC
Hi-Z
AD8 Input Levels With the 20 dB pad turned off and the gain trim set to
its leftmost position (min gain), the differential input
range of the AD8 is 0 dBu. This means that a sine
wave of 0 dBu amplitude (0,775 Vrms) will produce a
full-scale output signal (0 dBFS) digital output signal.
Exceeding this input level will cause the converter to
clip.
When the pad is enabled, all signals applied to the
input are attenuated by 20 dB before being applied to
the preamplifier. This will extend the range of the input,
so signals up to +20 dBu (7,75 Vrms) can be tolerated.
The range of the gain trim is around 35 dB, so when it
is turned all the way up, the input range decreases to
35 dBu (~15 mVrms). Clipping obviously causes
severe distortion of the signal and should be always
avoided. Clipping very brief transients (12 samples
XX 50 ms) is sometimes considered acceptable.
However, due to the high dynamic range that the AD8
possesses, there is no need to record at a level that
will cause transient clipping. A slight reduction in gain
will avoid distorting the signal and still leave ample
dynamic range. Transient handling is best left for the
mastering stage, when the signal is finally mapped to
16 bits.
Unprocessed signal sources have peak to average
level ratios of up to 20 dB, so we recommend setting
the 0 VU level at 20 dBFS digital. Signals coming
from analog tape are already compressed, with a
lower peak to average ration. Higher line-up levels, up
to 14 dBFS for 0 VU, can be used.
Connecting
the AD8 to
balanced output
equipment
10
Figure 2:
Preferred balanced
cable setup
red
black
red
two conductor shielded twisted cable
shield
Female
Male
red
black
shield
red
two conductor shielded twisted cable
black
shield
3
1
black
shield
3
1
Male
11
A: Shield connected to chassis contact on source equipment
red
2
3
1
red
black
shield
black
shield
2
3
1
Male
Female
B: Shield connected via decoupling cap. C=10nF film type
red
red
2
3
1
black
shield
black
shield
2
3
1
Male
Female
C: Shield lifted on source equipment
3
1
red
red
black
black
shield
shield
Female
Male
2
3
1
Figure 3:
Hum fixing techniques
Monitor outs
(default)
Inserts
JP2
JP3
off
JP4
JP6
off
JP5
JP7
on
1)
on
on
off
off
on
1) Short between
pins 2 and 3 of
channel expansion
connector (J2
on CH7/8 strips)
AD8 provides eight led bar level meters, to assist in Level meters
setting the gain of the unit. The are digital meters, with
each led lighting when the peak signal level exceeds
the level written next to it. The thresholds are accurate
to 0,1 dB. There is no margin above the red led, which
means clipping is taking place whenever it lights. If this
happens, turn the level down fast.
Clocking
AD8 can work with either internal or external clocking.
Each mode of operation was designed to respond
to specific demands. When you use a single AD8
unit, that needs not be synchronous with another
equipment, the best performance is obtained using
the internal clock mode.
If you need to synchronize one or more AD8 units, or
a combination of AD8 units and other equipment, then
you will need a master clock source for the whole system. If you have such a clock source then all you have
12
Clock
source
(clean)
Figure 4:
Several AD8/AD8 pro
units are slaved
to a stable external
source using a bus
configuration
in out
Wordclock
AD8
in out
Wordclock
AD8
in out
Wordclock
AD8
To other equipment
Clk source = external
Clock
source
i/o out
Wordclock
AD8 pro
i/o out
Wordclock
AD8 pro
i/o out
Wordclock
AD8 pro
13
To other equipment
in out
Wordclock
AD8
in out
Wordclock
in out
Wordclock
AD8
AD8
Figure 5:
Several AD8
units slaved to
a master AD8
To other equipment
i/o
Wordclock
AD8 pro
i/o
Wordclock
AD8 pro
i/o
Wordclock
AD8 pro
Figure 6:
Several AD8 pro
units slaved to
a master AD8 pro
To other equipment
Clock
source
(noisy)
in out
Wordclock
AD8
in out
Wordclock
AD8
in out
Wordclock
AD8
Figure 7:
Daisy-chain configuration of several AD8
units slaved to
a noisy source
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Figure 8:
Jitter attenuation
characteristic
10
100
1K
10K
14
M5,N
L5,N
LSB
L2,N
M6,N
L6,N
LSB
L3,N
LSB
M7,N
CH7
L7,N
LSB
CH5
M4,N
CH4
LSB
L4,N
M8,N
CH8
LSB
L8,N
CH7
CH8
H8,N M8,N L8,N
H8,N
MSB
H4,N
MSB
CH6
H7,N
MSB
CH4
H6,N
MSB
M3,N
CH3
H3,N
MSB
CH3
CH2
H5,N
MSB
CH1
M2,N
CH6
H2,N
LSB
CH5
L1,N
MSB
Converter data
M1,N
LSB
CH2
H1,N
MSB
CH1
Adat 2
x2 mode
Adat 1
x2 mode
Adat 2
x1 mode
Adat 1
x1 mode
15
Figure 9:
Mapping of converter
data to Adat channels
for various operation
modes
16
Specifications
Resolution
Resolution:
Resolution mapping:
Preamp channels
Gain adjustment range:
Sensitivity at min gain:
Sens. at min gain with pad:
Equivalent input
noise voltage:
Equivalent
input noise current:
Signal-noise ratio and
dyn. range (ref 0 dBFS):
Total Harmonic
Distortion + Noise:
2020000 Hz:
IMD (SMPTE):
Input impedance:
Bandwidth:
Interchannel Isolation:
Interch. phase deviation:
Interch. gain matching:
Low cut filter:
24 bits
to 20, or 16 bits
>35 dB
0 dBFS = 0 dBu
0 dBFS = +20 dBu
130 dBu,
rs = 150 , max gain,
Lo-Z mode
115 dBu,
rs = 150 , min gain,
Lo-Z mode
112 dBu,
rs = 600 , Hi-Z mode
insignificant for capacitive
sources larger that 500 pF
115 dB,
rs = 150 ,
Lo-Z mode
95 dB,
rs = 150 ,
Lo-Z mode
112 dB,
rs = 600 ,
Hi-Z mode
77 dB,
rs = 600 ,
Hi-Z mode
min gain,
max gain,
min gain,
max gain,
17
Analog Inputs
Connector type:
Input Voltage Range:
BNC
10k
TTL
4050 kHz, @1 clock mode
80100 kHz, @2 clock mode
BNC
50
TTL
50
up to 10m, up to 8 units
<100 ppm
over temperature range
<50 ps rms
PLL section
Static phase error:
<100 ns
Internally generated jitter: <100 ps rms
Jitter attenuation:
40 dB @ 500 Hz
60 dB @ 5000 Hz
18
Toslink optical
normal, S/MUX
19
This equipment has been
tested and found to comply with the limits for a
class B digital device,
pursuant to part 15 of the
FCC rules. These limits
are designed to provide
reasonable protection
against harmful interference in a residental installation. This equipment
generates, ises, and can
radiate radio frequency
emergency and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual, may cause
harmful interference to
radio communications.
However, there is no
guarantee that interference will not occur
in a particular installation.
If this equipment does
cause interference to
radio or television equipment reception, which
can be turning the equipment off and on, the user
is encouraged to correct
the interference by any
combination of the following measures:
n Relocate or reorient
Swissonic AG
P. O. Box 304, CH-8730 Uznach, Switzerland
Phone +41 55 285 86 10, Fax +41 55 285 86 15
www.swissonic.com, info @ swissonic.com
Swissonic America
407 Stony Point RD, Santa Rosa, CA 95401
Phone 707 577 7691, Fax 707 577 7692
www.swissonic.com, infousa@swissonic.com