Distortionmeter

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A distortionmeter (or more precisely distortion factor meter) is an electronic measuring instrument which displays the amount of distortion added to the original signal by an electronic circuit.

Harmonic distortion

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Harmonic distortion is equivalent to adding harmonics to a signal. When a purely sinusoidal signal is in this way, a series of harmonics is superimposed on the original signal, and can be detected with suitable equipment.

If the input is

fi=a1sin(ωt)

The normalized output is

fo=a1sin(ωt)+a2sin(2ωt)+a3sin(3ωt)+..

The value of Total Harmonics Distortion (THD) is defined as the ratio of the harmonics to the fundamental; [1] i.e.,

THD=a22+a32+..a1

This ratio can be given in dB or in percentage.

The instrument

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A distortionmeter is a level meter with two switchable parallel circuits at the input. The first circuit measures the total signal at the output of a system. (For low distortion levels this will be almost equal to fundamental). That value is adjusted to read 100% or, equivalently, to 0 dB. The second circuit is a high pass filter which removes (as much as practical) the fundamental frequency. This can be a notch filter, one which passes all but the fundamental, with negligible attenuation at other frequencies (including whatever harmonics might be present). Alternatively, if the distortion products are at higher frequencies, a highpass filter can be used if its cutoff rate is sufficiently steep to not affect the expected distortion products. The output of the filter is measured as a percentage of the fundamental, and the reported value will be the distortion value.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Reference data for Radio Engineers, Howard W.Sams & co.ITT, Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value)., p.18-12