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My studio uses an RME Raydat PCIe card, and I was looking through its documentation. It doesn't say "TTL" anywhere, but it can toggle between a "Consumer" and "Professional" level spdif output. The "professional" say it is 2.3 Vpp. Does that sound like I should be able to run that directly into the BIII?
Also, if I ran that signal into the Sinlge spdif level converter first, is there a chance it would damage the spdif converter board and/or the BIII?
Thanks in advance!
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It would not cause damage. S/PDIF (consumer and AES/EBU (aka "Pro")), is like an AC signal, meaning it goes from positive to negative relative to ground. TTL S/PDIF is always positive relative to it's ground. The ES9018 requires TTL. The converter takes the consumer/pro and outputs TTL. NOTE: I know S/PDIF isn't a sine-wave, it's just for illustrative purposes :) Edited by user Monday, June 11, 2012 5:10:34 PM(UTC)
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Rank: Member
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Joined: 11/16/2010(UTC) Posts: 24 Location: Dallas TX USA
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