A low pass filter allows signals below a chosen cutoff frequency to pass while attenuating those above it, the same function also known as a high cut filter.
A low pass filter permits signals below a chosen cutoff frequency to pass while attenuating those above it. Because it removes the high end of the spectrum, the same circuit is also called a high cut filter, and it is a fundamental tool for shaping signals. The cutoff point determines which frequencies pass freely and which are progressively reduced.
In commercial and professional audio, video, and communication systems, low pass filtering removes unwanted high frequency content, limits bandwidth, and reduces certain types of noise. In audio crossovers, for example, a low pass filter sends only the lower frequencies to a woofer. The filtered signals travel on cable whose own characteristics must support the intended frequency range, so conductor and shielding choices remain relevant to clean performance.
The sharpness of a filter's transition from passing to blocking is described by its slope, and steeper slopes reject unwanted frequencies more aggressively, giving designers a way to tailor how cleanly the high end is removed.
Choosing the cutoff and slope together gives a designer fine control over exactly how the high end of a signal is shaped.
At Windy City Wire, the focus on quality low-voltage audio and signal cable supports the clean signal paths that filtered systems depend on. Supplying cable suited to the intended frequency range helps ensure that signals shaped by filters like a low pass reach their destination without added degradation.
Also called high cut filter