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lijnniveau

Line niveau, or line level, is a standard signal level used for interconnecting audio devices. It sits between microphone level and speaker or amplifier levels, enabling signals to be passed through racks, mixers, and consumer electronics without excessive gain or loss. In practice, line level refers to the nominal voltage of the signal at the output of a source and the input of a destination.

Two common reference levels are used: consumer line level at about -10 dBV (0.316 V rms) and

Line connections are designed for relatively low impedance sources and high impedance inputs. Line inputs typically

Typical use includes feeding a DAC, CD player, audio interface, mixer, or preamplifier line input from another

professional
line
level
at
about
+4
dBu
(1.23
V
rms).
The
dBu
reference
uses
a
0.775
V
RMS
reference;
dBV
uses
1
V
RMS.
Accordingly,
professional
equipment
expects
a
hotter
signal
than
most
consumer
gear.
Some
devices
specify
nominal
line
levels
in
decibels
relative
to
these
references,
and
adapters
exist
to
match
levels.
present
high
impedance
(tens
of
kilohms
or
more)
and
accept
unbalanced
(RCA,
3.5
mm)
or
balanced
(XLR,
TRS)
connections.
Balanced
lines
offer
better
noise
rejection
over
longer
cables.
line
output.
When
connecting
devices
with
incompatible
levels,
a
pad
or
attenuator,
or
a
DI/buffer
might
be
used
to
prevent
clipping
or
excessive
noise.