Hello Monroe All beginning will be difficult and won't become easier later... ;-) Ground is nothing special. It means only one common signal rail. An electrical voltage signal always requires two rails. You may call the one rail "signal" and the other "ground" (but you don't have to). Have a look at http://fa.utfs.org/diy/rc.jpg There is technically do difference between those two cicuits, only the kind of graphical depiction is different. Complex circuit diagrams become much more readable, if you don't line out the complete ground and powersupply rails. For simple circuits like the rc-filter it might be superflouos. Florian Eskew schrieb: > Hello, > > I'm a total novice on circuits and circuit diagrams, so I have a very > basic question. On the A100 DIY page, what does the ground symbol > mean exactly? I'm a little confused because this diagram on wikipedia > shows no ground connection for an RC filter: > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RC_filter. Does it just signify which > side of the jack to connect to? Or does it make the filter work > better than the version on wikipedia? I'd like to avoid having to > connect a passive circuit to the power board. > > Thanks, > Monroe > > > ------------------------------------ > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > >
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Re: [Doepfer_a100] DIY page
2009-02-25 by Florian Anwander
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