I'm not quite sure how to go about asking this, so please bear with me if I don't make much sense, as there are some large holes in my terribly small amount of electronics knowledge...This might be the spring board of many more questions
This is something I've conceptually understood/took for face value for a long time but never knew the literal technical details of what goes on under the hood.
In a balanced line driver, the polarity of the balanced input is maintained all the way to the output. If a transformer is used to balance an unbalanced signal, is the following what happens...
Signal into one end of TX primary, the other end is grounded, then at both ends of the secondary you get "two" signals that are out of phase with eachother?
Thanks a bunch!
-Ethan
This is something I've conceptually understood/took for face value for a long time but never knew the literal technical details of what goes on under the hood.
In a balanced line driver, the polarity of the balanced input is maintained all the way to the output. If a transformer is used to balance an unbalanced signal, is the following what happens...
Signal into one end of TX primary, the other end is grounded, then at both ends of the secondary you get "two" signals that are out of phase with eachother?
Thanks a bunch!
-Ethan