Home Video Asylum

TVs, VCRs, DVD players, Home Theater systems and more.

120ms worth

I believe you mean "ms" (milliseconds), as the "/" between "m/s" means "per" (eg, miles/second, meters/second, etc) and delay time in Home Theater applications is normally expressed in milliseconds (ms). If you meant something else by m/s, perhaps you could type out the abbreviation.

But to answer your question, the DSP will output all zeros as a buffer, for a user specified amount of time (in your case, 120 milliseconds), before the audio stream it received is sent to the D-A converter. If you'd like to know how many actual zeros are in 120ms, you need to also specify the sampling rate and the bit depth.

Again, I am asking you to point me to relevant discussion of delay induced jitter so that I can read up on this subject.


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  • 120ms worth - Joe Murphy Jr 14:11:58 12/10/11 (0)

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