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I recommended taking the rectifier output directly to the
two storage caps by a twisted triple conductor, so that no
current pulses passed through any ground or supply traces.
The storage caps should be right at the output pair, since
their load current is the single largest single load on
these capacitors, and proximity keeps those large output
currents out of the rest of the supply and ground traces.
70's? That is not vintage nor is it up to current capability, I had a '70sD said:I made my own amplifier electronics and put it in an old (1970's I
think) amplifier box. The original front label has "solid state
amplifier". It still has the original rumble filter switch which I
think is the same thing..
D from BC
I think you need a few more Zs in there. The main load on
the 1000 uF cap is not the regulator, but the output
transistor.
Where does the headphone ground return make
connection to that schematic, and where is the Z in that
path?
I would want the regulator to have its ground
reference connection be connected to ground at the point
where the two channels of headphone grounds first connect
together, not at some distant end of their common path back
to the transformer center tap. I like what you show from
transformer to storage capacitor, but not to the right of that.
All good.
I would keep the regulators close to the storage, if
possible. If this is not possible for thermal or other
reasons, than the 100 nF input cap bypasses quite a bit of
path inductance at the frequencies where it matters. That
is its purpose.
As I spoke about.
[....]I.e. the regulators (7815/7915, not to be omitted I think) would be
fed from these two storage caps, too (through separate traces for
their minor load current).
Right. Keep those 100 nF pairs for each regulator right up
against the regulator pins, for stability.I will add stress to the above. One inch of wire is too much between
the LM7815 and the capacitor.
Okay. I stress that! ;-)
What is it with Z's? Do you mean Z as the symbol for impedance?
As MooseFET said "places where ideally, a small lossy impedance will
be in series". These would be resistors, for dampening purposes?
MooseFET said:You could use resistances if you had to. I would suggest lossy
inductors, if cost is no object.
Working left to right.
The ones at the left side of the drawing, reduce the peak current in
the bridge, and block RF. It is a serious bummer when your new
amplifier circuit starts picking up the nearby radio transmitters.
Oh for heaven's sake !
Through the power supply ? Are you being even remotely serious ?
MooseFET said:Yes absolutely. Don't think of it as a power supply. Think of it as
the connection to the antenna. The detector would be some diode
junction in the first op-amp.
It looks like this:
Cable House wiring
Audio ============->!================ Mains
Diode
The capacitance of the transformer makes it disappear from
consideration by time you get to the AM band.
ectoplasm said:What is it with Z's? Do you mean Z as the symbol for impedance?
As MooseFET said "places where ideally, a small lossy impedance will
be in series". These would be resistors, for dampening purposes?
You're blowing out of your backside.
Stop inventing non-existent problems for the poor OP.
The Zs are just a way to consciously remember that every
piece of conductor has resistance and inductance, and so,
will produce voltage drop in response to current and changes
in current, respectively.
MooseFET said:Oh shut up.
I gave him good advice. I didn't suggest a problem I
haven't seen in real life.
MooseFET said:Note that I said "ideally". I was suggesting "Z"s be placed on
purpose. This can be just the way the wires go, small value resistors
or even lossy inductors.
It doesn't matter much how they are done, it only matters that
something like that be the case.
The ones over at the left are to keep RF out as well as to spread out
the current in the bridge. They are likely to be actually resistors.
Shut up yourself.
Are you a professional; audio designer ?
There's got to be something seriously wrong if the PSU is causing RF pick up.
Sorry I misunderstood you. I thought you were just labeling
the unavoidable impedance of those current paths. Have you
designed audio or other equipment in which you actually
added those components?
I have added a capacitor across the secondary of
transformers to lower the resonant ringing frequency that
occurs when the rectifiers snap off, but not small series
impedances.
http://sound.westhost.com/project24.htm
Could someone tell me the function of the 22uF and 10uF capacitors
around the gain potmeter? (After the first opamp)
I want to replace the gain potmeter by a gain switch, with 3 positions
(that is, two resistors in series where the potmeter is now; the
switch selects one of the points).
There should be a capacitor to reduce switching clicks (150nF or so),
but where should it be placed?
I want to add a volume potmeter at the input of the amplifier, after
the 10uF. But it would affect the filter (with the 1nF), wouldn't it?
Keep the capacitor and 100K to ground after the switch. This way the
volume goes to zero if the switch connections go open. Letting the
input of an opamp float is a bad thing to do.
Yes.
BTW: Why only 3 positions?
[...]
Why not leave the volume control where it is?
Keep the capacitor and 100K to ground after the switch. This way the
volume goes to zero if the switch connections go open. Letting the
input of an opamp float is a bad thing to do.
Yes.
BTW: Why only 3 positions?
[...]
Why not leave the volume control where it is?