Impedance bridging Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
In electronics, especially audio and sound recording, an impedance bridging or voltage bridging connection is one which maximizes voltage transfer to the load. The other typical configuration is an impedance matching connection, which maximizes power delivered to the load.(Additionally, a bridged audio connection is one in which the positive outputs of two amplifiers are connected to the load, with relatively inverted waveforms, which is a different concept. This should have its own article. Perhaps bridging (audio)?)
When the output (output impedance) Zout of a device (the source) is connected to the input (input impedance) Zin of another device (the load), it is a bridging connection if the second device does not appreciably load the previous device.
In systems involving very long lines (telephone systems), the impedances must be matched to prevent reflections of the signal at the ends of the line from causing reflections and echoes.
A circuit is said to be bridged if the load impedance is at least ten times the source impedance.
In audio system specifications, the value of the low output impedance is hidden in the word damping factor, DF, which is:
See: Impedance matching
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