Go Back   Home > Forums > Blogs
Home Forums Articles Links Blogs Register Donations FAQ Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read

We're saving for a new server - help us to serve you by Donating Today and become a friend with benefits!

Ads on/off / Custom Title / 2009 Tshirt / More PMs / Bigger Images / Advanced printing


The proverbial messy bench with ideas, projects and solder droppings.

Mind the cat sleeping under the bench
Old

MooseFET

Posted 8th November 2009 at 12:02 PM by Geek (Geek's Bench)
Updated 12th November 2009 at 10:46 AM by Geek (Added link to GeeK ZonE version of this entry.)

MooseFET is a low gain, power MOSFET based line stage that fills the gap between a passive preamp and a standard line stage.

The design goals were:

- Lower than usual linestage gain.
- Be simple.
- Be reliable.
- Be rugged.
- Be easily portable.
- Not sound "solid state".
- Not need a complex power supply, typically required of single ended MOSFET stages.
- Be inexpensive to build.



The Circuit

** NOTE: The forum resizes the images. Please click on them to see fullsize.

Let's take a quick look at MooseFET's circuit:

Click the image to open in full size.

The first thing you might say is, "Isn't that a BoZ?". The answer is not quite, but it was definately inspired by the magic of Nelson Pass (who contributed to this circuit with insights and suggestions)....
Geek's Avatar
diyAudio Member
Posted in Uncategorized
Views 84 Comments 2 Geek is offline
Old

The Underappreciated Hybrid Mu Follower

Posted 6th November 2009 at 12:01 PM by Geek (Geek's Bench)
Updated 12th November 2009 at 10:45 AM by Geek (Added link to GeeK ZonE version of this entry.)

Anyone who has used the mu follower topology and likes it, must also understand one of the frustrations with the circuit is the heater supply for the top tube.

Why is this a problem in the first place? Well, I can think of two reasons... hum suppression of the heater supply and heater to cathode breakdown potential.

One of the tricks to suppressing hum on the heater I like to use is to lift the heater to some positive potential above the cathode potential (Figure 1). That is no real problem where the cathode is near ground, but when one cathode of a dual section tube is floating higher up in the sky, raising the heater voltage to where the top heater is above the cathode may inavertently cause heater cathode breakdown of the bottom tube.

** NOTE: The forum resizes the images. Please click on them to see fullsize.

Click the image to open in full size.

With a lower high voltage power supply,...
Geek's Avatar
diyAudio Member
Posted in Uncategorized
Views 107 Comments 3 Geek is offline
Hide this!Advertise here!

New To Site? Need Help?

All times are GMT. The time now is 10:38 PM.

Page generated in 0.28346205 seconds (16.42% PHP - 83.58% MySQL) with 16 queries

Copyright ©1999-2009 diyAudio