We're having fun now!
thanks rstofer, it's a pleasure to read you, you understand from afar that you have a great passion for this world of electrons
If only I still had that sound card on the table .. I could do other tests, I would understand a lot ... but it would be enough even a signal generator (therefore ac) to test on the bench .. soon something similar will come!
I reread at least 5 times to understand what you wanted to explain to me, and I learned something: in practice with rigol, we are seeing on the display the yellow track which includes a part of DC, and the blue track without dc (only ac). This shows that the pure AC track has zero volts in the center of the wave, while the DC contaminated track has zero volts with downward offset.
In practice, on channel 2, since there is a condenser, it purified the wave from the DC!
Bringing it all back to my sound card waves, this means that those waves have DC contamination, which the 470uf output capacitor failed to completely eliminate.
(if I remember correctly I had made the measurement of only the L channel AFTER the capacitor on the tp predisposed on the board ..)
This teaches me that: if the AC wave has zero volts in the center, it has no DC contamination inside it, otherwise there is DC!
I saw the mathematical functions in the manual, there will be a lot to learn in that chapter! I have to get there prepared, for this, in small steps I am reading the manual gradually.
Very clear the scheme with Ltspice, I also have that program on the PC, it's not bad.
thanks again for the teaching ... and for the final joke you're right, I have fun when it comes to electronics
Charlotte
edit:
I add this consideration: if you look at my measurement of the audio signal input to the card (so it is the audio signal that comes out of the PC), we can see that it has a lot of noise, but it is before DC, it has zero volts in the center of the wave !, This teaches me that then in the audio circuits of the card or in the sta540 amplifier, the audio signal acquires the dc ..