There are chips called "bucket brigade" delay lines that will do this job
easily. Radio Shack and Digi-Key here in the States would have them. I'd
check MAPLEN (spelling could be wrong here!) using that terminology.
Cliff K7RR
On Mon, 5 Jun 2000, Mike Dennison wrote:
I have been playing around with feeding differently derived audio into
the two halves of stereo headphones with some interesting results.
I will report in detail when the tests are complete. In short, it is
certainly possible to improve headphone reception, both in terms of
close-in selectivity and resistance to static.
One question. How do I make an electronic circuit to delay a
broadband audio signal by about one-thousandth of a second,
without resorting to DSP? Any genius out there with a simple
circuit? And yes I do know about the methods (that were originally
used for electric guitar echo) such as connecting the diaphragms of
a loudspeaker and a microphone by using a spring, and also the
tape recorder method.
Mike, G3XDV (IO91VT)
http://www.dennison.demon.co.uk/activity.htm
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