Chapter 5 Input/Output Interfaces

5.8AUDIO SUBSYSTEM

The systems covered in this guide come standard with an embedded Sound Blaster 128 audio subsystem.

5.8.1 FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS

A block diagram of the audio subsystem is shown in Figure 5-10. The Ensonic ES1373 Audio Controller, operating off the PCI bus, accesses and controls a Cirrus Logic CS4297A Audio Codec. The codec provides the analog-to-digital (ADC) and digital-to-analog (DAC) conversions as well as the mixing functions. All control functions such as volume, audio source selection, and sampling rate are controlled through software over the PCI bus through the ES1373 Audio Controller. Control data and digital audio streams (record and playback) are transferred between the Audio Controller and the Audio Codec over the AC97 Link Bus.

The analog stereo outputs from the codec are applied to a 3-watt mono amplifier that drives a 16- ohm speaker.

The interfaces allowing connection to external audio devices include:

Mic In - This input uses a three-conductor (stereo) 1/8” phone jack that is specifically designed for connection of a condenser microphone with an impedance of 10-K ohms. This is the default recording input after a system reset.

Line In - This input uses a three-conductor (stereo) 1/8” phone jack that is specifically designed for connection of a high-impedance (10k-ohm) audio source such as a tape deck.

Headphones / Line / SPDIF Out - This output uses a three-conductor (stereo) 1/8” phone jack that is designed for connecting a set of 16-ohm (nom.) stereo headphones or powered speakers. Plugging into the Headphones jack mutes the signal to the internal speaker. This jack also provides a digital output signal conforming to the Sony/Philips Digital Interface (SPDIF) format.

5-26Compaq Deskpro EXS and Workstation 300 Personal Computers

Featuring the Intel Pentium 4 Processor

First Edition – December 2000

Page 120
Image 120
Compaq 850 manual Audio Subsystem, Functional Analysis