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At the low frequencies you are using you don't need BNC or coax. Twisted signal pair inside a grounded at signal source end screen might actually be better for what you want here.>I'm interested in this idea, though I'm not sure how to apply this in
If you make your signals balanced differential drive then you can
withstand a lot of ambient common mode noise without problems. The way
that instrumentation amplifiers do it.
>
any practical way to the connections inside the analog computer, i.e.,
the patches between the different integrators and such.
As far as the connection from the signal generator to the analog
computer input, that doesn't sound too hard. But with a quick search on
the Internet, it seems that balanced cables are not made with BNC
connectors on one end, to match the signal generator. Do you know of an
adapter that would work for this?
For the differential receiver, do I need anything special for this, orAt the low frequencies you are talking about some of the cables intended for broadcast quality microphones have the right sort of screening.
can I just feed the conductors into an LF356 op amp (unity gain
configuration...?)
>Any particular cable you recommend?
IOW rather than coax you have two signal lines v+ and v- inside a
passive conductive outer shield that plays no part in the signal
transmission. It is there only as a Faraday shield against external
interference.
>
Those boards don't look at all sophisticated. When you say building it on breadboards do you mean Vero board or some other soldered prototyping medium or do you mean literally on a plug in patchboard?I think there is something funny going on with your setup.I don't know of anything "funny" but am still learning. This is
certainly a DIY, learn-as-you-go project. For the analog computer, I'm
largely following the Grappendorf schematics, though building it on a
breadboard instead of printing the PCBs, which I can't afford right now.
https://www.grappendorf.net/projects/analog-computer/
Some other substitutions I have made: I haven't built a PS as I happenHave you checked that your bipolar 15v supply isn't the noise source?
to have access to a bipolar 15V supply already, though admittedly it is
a rather old unit. I also haven't built the reference voltage module but
am hoping to have parts for that in the next few weeks.
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