Signal to Noise Ratio


I was comparing the specs on a couple of cassette decks I own. I have always known that the higher the S/N the better. But what exactly does a greater S/N mean?
brianmgrarcom

Showing 1 response by nhorton

That is slightly different from my understanding. The term Signal to Noise Ratio is just that, a ratio. My understanding is that the idea is a 100S/N ratio means that for every 100 dB's of signal, you get 1dB of noise. Thus you want as much signal as possible for every bit of noise.