In EE parlance, noise is either 'normal mode' (i.e. differential, meaning the inner conductor carries it in one direction - forward - and the return path is the outer conductor or shield of the IC) or 'common-mode'. In the CM scenario both conductors are passing noise in the same direction and the return path is another conductor somewhere else - normally the mains wiring.jkeny wrote:I was thinking that noise other than CM noise transmitted on the signal lines might cause degradation in sound & the trafo may have rejected this due to it's bandwidth limitations?
Does that help any? So all noise is either DM or CM or a combination of the two.
Ah so you are thinking that the transformer is going to act as a low-pass filter on the DM signal. I suppose it will but it'll be hard to quantify its effect. I've checked the passband of one of my trafos into a light load (such as an amp input) and its well into 100's of kHz. The low-pass effect would be unchanged when the two sides were shorted together, which is how we started out if you recall? With just the trafo in circuit and no isolation the SQ improvement was negligible if I remember right?There may be LF or HF noise outside of the trafos pass bandwidth that would be rejected.
I noticed a few years ago that this technique is used in some ethernet isolation transformers - combining a CM choke with a trafo. Seems to me like a trick too good to be left only to the digital boys...Oh, I didn't realise this choke was meant to go in series with the trafo!