Recent content by hamburg21

  1. H

    Circuit to control the pulse width of digital signals

    Digital is the way to go, I agree. But not clocked digital, as I want a continuous input output function Hi Jim, Thanks for contributing to the conversation. I will look at your derivation some time today/this weekend. PWM is definitely something I have been looking into because it relates...
  2. H

    Circuit to control the pulse width of digital signals

    this has been helpful. I think in the end, this is very limited method of controlling pulse-widths. It cannot give an arbitrary function of widths f(input) = output.
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    Circuit to control the pulse width of digital signals

    I think I was wrong about having a variable m. I thought that by adjusting the threshold, it would change the multiplicative factor. Instead, I now believe that the multiplicative factor of the formula m*((input width) - dw) is always 2. dw is what gets adjusted,
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    Circuit to control the pulse width of digital signals

    I am not, the m is fixed at 2. This technique seems it will always double the time that the integrator is about the threshold while the input is in a high state.
  5. H

    Circuit to control the pulse width of digital signals

    we are just labeling m differently. in my equation, m is what multiplies the input width. output width = m*((input width) - dw) m*(6 ms - dw) = 2; m*(7 ms - dw) = 4; m*(8 ms - dw) = 6; You are correct that the ratio of output/input, which some may call the gain, is not fixed. But the...
  6. H

    Circuit to control the pulse width of digital signals

    ahaaa! I understand what you are saying, and I still think I am correct - we are just calculating m differently. Based on your argument 5 ms = dw (see my picture). dw is fixed and does not change because the slope is fixed and the threshold is fixed. 2*(6 ms - dw) = 2; 2*(7 ms - dw) = 4; 2*(8...
  7. H

    Circuit to control the pulse width of digital signals

    why? isn't it just dependent on the RC?
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    Understanding Magnetic Field Lines: Fact or Fiction?

    Just found this: http://van.physics.illinois.edu/QA/listing.php?id=27163&t=magnetic-field-lines-dont-really-exist nice quote: "It sure looks like field lines, right? Actually, this clumpiness has nothing to do with field lines; it's just a coincidence that it looks like lines (or perhaps it...
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    Understanding Magnetic Field Lines: Fact or Fiction?

    I like the analogy, but that is hand-waving the problem away.
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    Understanding Magnetic Field Lines: Fact or Fiction?

    That thing is awesome - I have never seen it before! Again, I realize what everyone is saying, I guess I am just looking for the physics behind the line "clumping". Has anyone modeled this effect? Meaning, has anyone written a numerical simulation that is seeded with these types of...
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    Circuit to control the pulse width of digital signals

    Maybe our definition of "linear" is the confusion. To me, linear is that the output y only depends on the input x, not something like x^2 or log(x). It is y LINEARLY related to x.
  12. H

    Circuit to control the pulse width of digital signals

    Can you at least tell me why the attached is wrong?
  13. H

    Circuit to control the pulse width of digital signals

    I still disagree - if the integrator is created the tent-like shape, and you choose a threshold like in the figure I attached, then the output will be linearly related to this input. Granted, like you said, there will be a range of short pulse widths < dw where the output will be nothing. BUT...
  14. H

    Circuit to control the pulse width of digital signals

    This is a device that will be discretized to the clock rate - not a continuous function f(x).
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