Figure of Merit (FOM): Difference between revisions
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FOM (Figure of Merit) is the product of the [[Resolution]] and the [[Signal-to- | FOM (Figure of Merit) is the product of the [[Resolution]] and the [[Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR)]]. It's dimensionless. | ||
It was introduced as an arbitrary reference and shorthand overall performance grade for classes/groups of tubes and individual specimens to facilitate comparison and what performance can be expected. | It was introduced as an arbitrary reference and shorthand overall performance grade for classes/groups of tubes and individual specimens to facilitate comparison and what performance can be expected. |
Revision as of 10:01, 25 August 2022
FOM (Figure of Merit) is the product of the Resolution and the Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR). It's dimensionless.
It was introduced as an arbitrary reference and shorthand overall performance grade for classes/groups of tubes and individual specimens to facilitate comparison and what performance can be expected.
A FOM number gives an indication of a tubes quality and usefulness but is not to be taken as a tell-all-end-all as a full spec sheet gives far more detailed insight as to a tubes performance albeit it might seem slightly more esoteric to people who are unfamiliar with interpreting a spec-sheet.
In order to fairly judge a tubes FOM rating one should have some knowledge of the category to which a tube belongs as well as an average or minimum number for at least one of the factors involved in producing a FOM rating. If one knows that a particular category of tubes has a minimum SNR of 30 with average at 36 then going by FOM alone when considering an individual tube of that category is less arbitrary
Mathematic formula
The formula is:
FOM=Resolution*Signal-to-noise ratio
As Resolution and SNR are two important numbers it is fair to say that a higher Figure of Merit is a fair indication of a particular tubes performance in general, but it is not possible to deduce from the number alone the individual number of either factor.