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gccradioscience Posted - Nov 23 2010 : 2:22:45 PM

I am a listener of my WiFi radio, but when I listen to most broadcasts they are in mono most of the time. I wanted to build a mono to stereo converter to at least hear the broadcasts in stereo. I know it will not work with AM radio broadcasts, but I would probably try it out. It's better than nothing. The problem is that I cannot find this IC that is required on the web. The TBA3810. If someone can help me find the IC for this circuit I would appreciate it. If I can get this IC, I can get this circuit built and test it on my stereo system.
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Aaron Cake Posted - Dec 12 2010 : 10:45:16 AM
quote:
Originally posted by gccradioscience

When there is stereo there is 5.1 channel surround sound available. Cause I remember when I was playing one of my 8 track tapes and switched the stereo receiver to surround I could hear the main vocals coming out of the center channel and the instruments come out of the surround sound speakers, this circuit might work for home theatre systems that are suffering mono television broadcasts.



There isn't anyway way to make 5.1 out of synthesized stereo because the synthesized stereo is unlike true stereo sound...it came from one channel instead of two channels and is "faked" by playing some frequencies out of one speaker and other frequencies out of the other.
wasssup1990 Posted - Dec 08 2010 : 01:58:52 AM
I have an option in my Sound Card's configuration program to turn on/off a feature called "speaker fill". It expands stereo from music files which are typically 2-channels out to 5.1-channels. Overall it does make for a better listening experience but not so much when I have the headphones on because they are only 2-channels. So I turn off "speaker fill" when I have my headphones on and when doing music editing/creation for higher fidelity.
audioguru Posted - Dec 07 2010 : 08:19:37 AM
The IC does not make stereo sound from a mono input. That is impossible.
The IC simply has a few filters so some frequencies "boom-boom" go to one channel and other frequencies "peep peep" go to the other channel. That is not stereo.

You can make psuedo surround sound from stereo because different phase shifts and delays are present between the two stereo channels.

Mono (vocals) come from the center front channel and stereo (instruments) come from the left and right front speakers in a surround sound system. So with a mono input then only the center front speaker will play.
gccradioscience Posted - Dec 06 2010 : 7:05:00 PM
When there is stereo there is 5.1 channel surround sound available. Cause I remember when I was playing one of my 8 track tapes and switched the stereo receiver to surround I could hear the main vocals coming out of the center channel and the instruments come out of the surround sound speakers, this circuit might work for home theatre systems that are suffering mono television broadcasts.
gccradioscience Posted - Dec 06 2010 : 7:02:10 PM
Thanks for the correction, I see in the shopping part of google that they are still available to buy online. This decoder sounds like something that should be a kit, I might find some small enclosure for it to be added to my stereo system. Why didn't they add this to radios when a broadcast is only in mono like AM radio?


Aaron Cake Posted - Nov 26 2010 : 11:45:03 AM
There is a mistake in the parts list. It should be TDA3810 not TBA3810. I've added that to my list of errata to fix.

Here is the datasheet:
http://www.datasheetcatalog.org/datasheet/philips/TDA3810.pdf

Of course the circuit does not magically make stereo sound from a mono source, it just shifts stuff between channels based on frequency to sort of simulate it and make audio more "spatial".

The circuit works with ANY mono source. Not sure how well it would work on pure vocal though. Probably make things sound robotic.
audioguru Posted - Nov 23 2010 : 8:30:43 PM
Datasheet Archive dot com has never heard about this IC. I don't think it was ever sold and is not made anymore.
It is impossible to "make" stereo from a mono signal. Maybe it makes "boom-boom" on one channel, and makes "peep peep" on the other channel. It is not stereo.

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