Quote:
Originally Posted by gevorg 
Exactly! There is nothing magical about USB power, its just a small power line...
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Correct, there's nothing special about the USB supply, but my whole point was that there's not necessarily anything special about an outboard supply, either. I wasn't comparing switchers to linear supplies, I was only addressing USB-derived power versus and external supply, and the mistaken assumption on the part of many the that latter is somehow inherently superior. It may be in some cases, but certainly not always, and this was just an illustration of that. I posted it because I'm frankly rather tired of hearing people simply parroting the idea about on forums that the 5V supply from USB is some dark and evil thing, and that no serious product could possibly use it - so here's some real data to show otherwise.
Incidentally, the USB supply is capable of 500mA - more than enough for any USB to SPDIF conversion I could conceive of, and then some. There's no benefit to additional amperage capacity, unless it it has the side effect of yielding a lower output impedance, which
is beneficial.
Quote:
Originally Posted by gevorg 
The graphs above for external power supply are misleading by using a random switching power supply, instead of a decent linear power supply which are available on the cheap too (~20 bucks).
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I can't see how the graphs are in any way misleading. If I had taken a measurement of a switching supply and labeled it as a linear supply (or the reverse),
that would be misleading. What you see is what you get, and this was representative of the supply that was actually shipped with one of the USB to SPDIF converters on the market currently (and not an inexpensive one, either) - hardly "random." No deception here.
EMI/RFI is an unavoidable consequence of the modern world, regardless of whether you choose a linear or switcher supply. A linear supply in the $20 range would likely offer poor filtering indeed for high-frequency interference.
Said another way, my point here was simply that the individual implementation is what really matters, not the underlying design principle. Its is entirely possible to achieve excellent performance with linear, switching, internal, or external supplies. Each has its advantages and disadvantages, but in the hands of a good designer any combination of these can be made to work well.