Distortionmeter


Distortionmeter is an electronic measuring instrument which displays the amount of distortion added to the original signal by an electronic circuit.

Harmonic distortion

is equivalent to adding harmonics to a signal. When a purely sinusoidal signal is in this way, a series of harmonics is superimposed on the original signal, and can be detected with suitable equipment.
If the input is
The normalized output is
The value of Total Harmonics Distortion is defined as the ratio of the harmonics to the fundamental;
i.e.,
This ratio can be given in dB or in percentage.

The instrument

A distortionmeter is actually a levelmeter with two switchable parallel circuits at the input. The first circuit measures the total signal at the output of a system.. That value is adjusted to read 100% or, equivalently, to 0 dB. The second circuit is a filter which removes the fundamental frequency. This can be a notch filter, one which passes all but the fundamental, with negligible attenuation at other frequencies. Alternatively, if the distortion products are at higher frequencies, a highpass filter can be used if its cutoff rate is sufficiently steep to not affect the expected distortion products. The output of the filter is measured as a percentage of the fundamental, and the reported value will be the distortion value.