Topic: RME test signal(s)
Hello to everyone and happy new year 2013!
While developing audio stuff and comparing different things I decided to compare the outputs from my sine generator and test tones from RME's site.
I focused on the 0_16.wav (the first one). It is a pure sine of 1 kHz, sampled at 44.1 kHz, 16 bit, dithered.
I checked the frequency spectra using my simple StFFT analyzer with FFT size of 8192 and 75% overlapping.
I got the following:
[img align=0_16.wav]http://s4.mojalbum.com/17376454_17428820_20378600/audio/20378600.jpg[/img]
Same spectra but zoomed around the spike:
[img align=0_16.wav (zoomed)]http://s4.mojalbum.com/17376454_17428820_20378599/audio/20378599.jpg[/img]
Don't get confused with the slider on the right side, it was just for test purpose and is disabled...
Then I created my own sine of exact 1000 Hz, sampled at 44100 Hz, dithered and noise shaped to 16 bit.
I got the following:
[img align=1000.00 Hz]http://s4.mojalbum.com/17376454_17428820_20378615/audio/20378615.jpg[/img]
Zommed around the spike:
[img align=1000.00 Hz (zoomed)]http://s4.mojalbum.com/17376454_17428820_20378614/audio/20378614.jpg[/img]
As you can see, there is a huge difference in the spectra of literally the same signal.
Then I opened both files with Wave Lab, manually aligned them out of phase and mixed them together. As a result I got a heavy beat tone, with slowly varying amplitude from -inf to 0 dBFS. I concluded, that the files don't have the same frequency.
Then I created my own sine again, but with frequency of 1001.29395Hz which is a frequency of 187th FFT bin (zero-based counting). 44100Hz sampling and noise shaped dithering to 16 bit gave the following result:
[img align=1001.29395 Hz]http://s4.mojalbum.com/17376454_17428820_20378645/audio/20378645.jpg[/img]
That looks pretty the same as the first picture and zooming around the spike proves that.
Mixing this signal out of phase with 0_16.wav in Wave Lab results in a very low (<-90dBFS) constant sine tone and noise. I guess this is due to different dithering methods, but it is quite fair to say that the frequency of both signals is the same.
My final conclusion is, that the test signal which is claimed to be pure, low distortion 1kHz sine has a slightly higher frequency than claimed.
Any comment from experienced guys?
Best regards, kasaudio