drjohsmith
- Joined Dec 13, 2021
- 1,601
So your looking at a classic all pass circuit
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All-pass_filter
In analog, These rely upon the capacitive element of a low / high pass frequency selective element to make the delay frequency dependent , giving a phase shift thats fairly constant over the frequency band .as seen in wiki
Phase shift is between 90 and 180 degrees
You have simulated , and these behave wonderfully
In real circuits you have patasitic and stray impedances , that makes them far from linear.
Realistic range is around 45 degrees .
Now digital , yep you can make "as near perfect" as you want all pass filteres.
But that's a much different topic
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All-pass_filter
In analog, These rely upon the capacitive element of a low / high pass frequency selective element to make the delay frequency dependent , giving a phase shift thats fairly constant over the frequency band .as seen in wiki
Phase shift is between 90 and 180 degrees
You have simulated , and these behave wonderfully
In real circuits you have patasitic and stray impedances , that makes them far from linear.
Realistic range is around 45 degrees .
Now digital , yep you can make "as near perfect" as you want all pass filteres.
But that's a much different topic