analyzer:hardware
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- | To be able to analyze an input signal, the signal has to be adapted to the microphone input levels. This means it has to be transformed to a low level AC-signal. | + | ====== Hardware ====== |
+ | To be able to analyze an input signal, the signal has to be adapted to the microphone input levels. This means it has to be transformed to a low level AC-signal. | ||
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+ | {{: | ||
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+ | The capacitor C2 is usually not needed, it is used to remove HF interference from the computer if the signal source is a sensitive radio receiver. | ||
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+ | ===== IR-Remotes ===== | ||
+ | Infrared remote controls is a typical example on protocols that can be decoded. The protocols used are typically quite simple with pulse lengths around 1 ms. The signals are almost always AM-decoded over a base frequency of 38KHz. To decode the real signal we need a decoder. Fortunately, | ||
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+ | ===== RF-Remotes ===== | ||
+ | Radio remotes, used for example for remote lamp switches use similar protocols as IR-Remotes, in some cases they actually reuse the same protocols. To be able to use these protocols we need a radio receiver which decodes the RF-signal. | ||
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+ | In Europe, the most common frequency used is 433.92MHz. This frequency is for example used by X10, Nexa, Detronic, WaveMan. It is possible to buy receiver chips for this frequency, but the cheapest and easiest way is actually to buy some cheap device which use the protocol and " |
analyzer/hardware.txt · Last modified: 2018/11/03 02:59 by 127.0.0.1