User's Guide Fireface 802
© RME
105
35.7 Noise level in DS / QS Mode
The outstanding signal to noise ratio of the Fireface 802 AD-converters can be verified even
without expensive test equipment, by using record level meters of various software. But when
activating the DS and QS mode, the displayed noise level will rise from -113 dB to -105 dB at 96
kHz, and –79 dB at 192 kHz. This is not a failure. The software measures the noise of the whole
frequency range, at 96 kHz from 0 Hz to 48 kHz (RMS unweighted), at 192 kHz from 0 Hz to 96
kHz.
When limiting the measurement range from 20 Hz to 20 kHz (so called audio bandpass) the
value would be -113 dB again. This can be verified with RME's
DIGICheck
. The function
Bit
Statistic & Noise
measures the noise floor by
Limited Bandwidth
, ignoring DC and ultrasound.
The reason for this behaviour is the noise shaping technology of the analog to digital convert-
ers. They move all noise and distortion to the in-audible higher frequency range, above 24 kHz.
That’s how they achieve their outstanding performance and sonic clarity. Therefore the noise is
slightly increased in the ultrasound area. High-frequent noise has a high energy. Add the dou-
bled (quadrupled) bandwidth, and a wideband measurement will show a significant drop in
SNR, while the human ear will notice absolutely no change in the audible noise floor.
35.8 SteadyClock
The SteadyClock technology of the Fireface 802 guarantees an excellent performance in all
clock modes. Thanks to a highly efficient jitter suppression, the AD- and DA-conversion always
operates on highest sonic level, being completely independent from the quality of the incoming
clock signal.
SteadyClock has been originally de-
veloped to gain a stable and clean
clock from the heavily jittery MADI data
signal (the embedded MADI clock suf-
fers from about 80 ns jitter). Using the
Fireface's input signals AES and
ADAT, you'll most probably never ex-
perience such high jitter values. But
SteadyClock is not only ready for
them, it would handle them just on the
fly.
Common interface jitter values in real
world applications are below 10 ns, a
very good value is less than 2 ns.
The screenshot shows an extremely jittery SPDIF signal of about 50 ns jitter (top graph, yellow).
SteadyClock turns this signal into a clock with less than 2 ns jitter (lower graph, blue). The sig-
nal processed by SteadyClock is of course not only used internally, but also used to clock the
digital outputs. Therefore the refreshed and jitter-cleaned signal can be used as reference clock
without hesitation.
Summary of Contents for Fireface 802
Page 7: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 7 User s Guide Fireface 802 General...
Page 12: ...12 User s Guide Fireface 802 RME...
Page 13: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 13 User s Guide Fireface 802 Installation and Operation Windows...
Page 28: ...28 User s Guide Fireface 802 RME...
Page 29: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 29 User s Guide Fireface 802 Installation and Operation Mac OS X...
Page 38: ...38 User s Guide Fireface 802 RME...
Page 39: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 39 User s Guide Fireface 802 Inputs and Outputs...
Page 47: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 47 User s Guide Fireface 802 Stand Alone Operation...
Page 50: ...50 User s Guide Fireface 802 RME...
Page 51: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 51 User s Guide Fireface 802 TotalMix FX...
Page 53: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 53...
Page 89: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 89 User s Guide Fireface 802 Class Compliant Mode...
Page 94: ...94 User s Guide Fireface 802 RME...
Page 95: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 95 User s Guide Fireface 802 Technical Reference...
Page 106: ...106 User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 36 Diagrams 36 1 Block Diagram Fireface 802...
Page 108: ...108 User s Guide Fireface 802 RME...
Page 109: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 109 User s Guide Fireface 802 Miscellaneous...