I'm trying to build a (partial) reconstruction of John Logie Baird's early-20th-century mechanical television design.
The instructions are here:-
http://www.sptv.demon.co.uk/nbtv/
They claim that one should be able to place an LED across the line out signal from a computer sound card and have it flicker in response to the signal. (In other words, the intended varying luminance of the LED is encoded via an audio signal).
However, I'm getting nothing out. I'd wondered whether the problem was that I was testing it with ordinary audio files (which are effectively AC, but going through an LED, i.e. a diode). However, I've tried DC offsetting some of them so that they're all above zero, and downloaded some of their WAV-encoded files (which seem to be partially DC offset), and I'm still getting nothing out.
So... should I be getting something by connecting an LED across line or headphone out? I've confirmed that everything else is okay by connecting a mini-speaker via a breadboard, and I can hear the audio.
- Macrosaurus
The instructions are here:-
http://www.sptv.demon.co.uk/nbtv/
They claim that one should be able to place an LED across the line out signal from a computer sound card and have it flicker in response to the signal. (In other words, the intended varying luminance of the LED is encoded via an audio signal).
However, I'm getting nothing out. I'd wondered whether the problem was that I was testing it with ordinary audio files (which are effectively AC, but going through an LED, i.e. a diode). However, I've tried DC offsetting some of them so that they're all above zero, and downloaded some of their WAV-encoded files (which seem to be partially DC offset), and I'm still getting nothing out.
So... should I be getting something by connecting an LED across line or headphone out? I've confirmed that everything else is okay by connecting a mini-speaker via a breadboard, and I can hear the audio.
- Macrosaurus