We often talk about “New Feature Requests” when handling customer feedback and technical support queries. In a nutshell, PicoScope is constantly evolving and trying to keep pace at times is challenging (I am thinking predominately of PS7 at present)
NVH is another example where New Features are being requested and of course “queued” for development along with other requests.
Spectrograms/Heat maps are one such new feature request that will eventually make into our NVH software but in the interim, there are other audio analysis software packages that provide a number of niche analysis features that Ben and I use when handling NVH cases
Sonic Visualiser and Audacity are both exceptional examples of such software and both focus on the manipulation of sound which you may rightly think is beyond the realm of automotive applications.
However, take a look at the video below where I have exported our NVH sensor data in .wav format and then analyzed further with Audacity
If you had a nicer audio program such as Ableton live, pro tools or logic, you could set up quantization blocks and see if those audio waveforms line up. Now say if you had a rattlein the car could I record it even with my iphone and isolate the frequency of the the rattle and use a audio signal generator or pink noise at the same frequency to make that rattle vibrate in the bay?
Please forgive my lack of interpretation when it comes to "Quantization blocks".
If I have understood this feature correctly, we are applying a Band Stop feature (to the mobile phone recording) to identify the offending frequency at which the cabin/component is rattling?
For more information on Band Stop the following forum post will help topic14151.html
In order to use the Band Stop feature, we need to import the audio (mobile phone recording) into NVH and we describe in this process here post93381.html#p93381
If the above is correct, using Band Stop highlights the offending frequency of interest which we can then playback into the cabin?
Could you confirm if the above process achieves the same end result as "Quantization blocks" using the Ableton Live software?
It would be great to learn an alternative method if you could share here?