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#1 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: up north
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Hello! I'm a newbie both to this forum and
electronics too. That means that I have tons of questions, but I'm taking it little by little to avoid that 'oh no! not another one'. Mainly I'm interested in building small amps and guitar fx as well. My current project is a stompbox sized miniamp for my guitar for starters and maybe I'll soon take on a gc. But first a bunch of questions that applies to most chips amps. Which one of these bypass configurations would be (do you) prefer? Why? I've seen all of these in various schematics, but I have no clue which one would be prefered and why. [I have larger version of this picture... Let's see how this one turns out.] |
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#2 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: up north
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Hmmm. Obviously the attached picture
did not appear, although it did in in the preview. I'll repost it in an hour or two. |
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#3 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: up north
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#4 |
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Electrons are yellow and more is better!
diyAudio Member
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Normally is "C" quite sufficent. The rule is that the caps should be connected between the points current is taken, normally supply voltage and signal ground, close to the current comsumer (opamp).
__________________
/Per-Anders (my first name) or P-A as my friends call me |
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#5 |
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diyAudio Member
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This is pretty much C I guess... except that it doesn’t go to ground, it goes to neg rail.
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#6 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: up north
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I see. So If I have a supply with Vcc and 0 rails and
a virtual ground driver at Vcc/2 one might as well put the bypass between Vcc and 0 rather than Vcc and Vcc/2 and also Vcc/2 and 0? What's the reason for a decoupling resistor then? It's common in rf circuitry, but I've seen it in a lot of amp and guitar fx schematics as well. A poor mans regulator? Wouldn't it kill dynamics? Even with only 0.1uF and 47Ohms the treshold is at about 33 kHz. What about putting bypass cap. as in A compared to B? Does that really make any difference? |
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