The distortion analyser allows the measurement of desired signal power and noise power content of a composite audio signal containing both noise/distortion and a desired signal. The result of the measurements is the ratio of noise plus distortion power to signal plus noise plus distortion, or percent distortion. This is accomplished by injecting a single tone, usually 1 Khz, as the desired signal. The instrument takes two measurements: one of total RMS input level, and the second of total RMS input level with the desired tone "notched out". The meter reading, labeled THD (total harmonic distortion), represents the ratio of these two measurements:
"THD" = RMS{input - test tone}/RMS{input} = RMS{noise}/(RMS{signal + noise})
Quotation marks are used above because the only time the measurement can be accurately called THD is when the noise component consists only of harmonics of the test tone. However, the dB scale on the distortion analyser can be used to measure SINAD, the most commonly used measure of signal quality in noise (from which SNR or signal to noise ratio may be extracted if desired).
SINAD is defined as:
SINAD(dB) = 10 log {(signal power plus noise power)/(noise power)}
= 10 log { SNRp + 1 }
(p subscript denotes power ratio as opposed to voltage ratio)
To demonstrate this, let
Vn = the RMS noise voltage,
Vs = the RMS signal voltage,
Vt = the RMS voltage of the combined signal and noise waveform
Pn = noise power, Ps = signal power,
Pt = total power in the combined signal plus noise waveform.
Using Parseval's Theorem, we may write :
Vt2 = Vs2 + Vn2 and Pt = Ps + Pn
Now, "THD" = Vn/Vt or, "THD"(dB) = 20 log{Vn/Vt}, therefore,
Pt/Pn = Vt2 / Vn2 = ( Vt/Vn)2 = ("THD")-2
Thus SINAD = ("THD")-2, and we can write
SINAD(dB) = 10 log{Pt/Pn} = 10 log{("THD")-2} = -20 log{"THD"}, or
SINAD(dB) = -"THD"(dB)
Thus the instrument can be used to measure both THD in the case of a single tone passing through an amplifier, or signal to noise ratio (actually SINAD in dB) in the case of a noisy signal.
It is important to note the advantage of using the dB unit of ratio measurement. Whereas "THD" represents a voltage ratio and SINAD represents a power ratio, our convention of calculating dB using a factor of 20 for voltage ratios and 10 for power ratios allows us to read SINAD in dB (a power ratio) directly off of the scale measuring "THD" in dB (a voltage ratio), even though, as we have shown, SINAD is a squared function of "THD" in an algebraic sense.
Procedure: