MHz amplifier

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Eva said:
What I would like to see is the carrier residual with no input signal and 10A DC load to one of the supply rails... ;)

i have no interesting to answer your new questiong before you Proof that you can make a 10x better 100k class-d amp better than MCD. (this is what you had told others here )
make it and show it , please :)
action is quite better than any words

rg
fumac
 
mahirerensan said:
yes please:)

sorry forget your asking
too busy , bucase doing hifi show at shanghai .
ok here is the picture what you need

the picture is 1k at 8vpp output at 4ohm of mcd-255
sorry for the Jitter from my hand, but you can get the idel voltage of the 1mhz pwm
 

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fumac said:



hello Choco longtime no see
how about you after back home

rg
fumac


Hi Fumac,
...it is ..so so... to busy & no time for class D fun...

I think Eva is asking for something different from what you posted.
She is interested in the HF output that you see if you run your amp with zero input.
You typically see a sine wave of the carrier frequency and some peaks at the switching moments.
This peaks are causing EMI issues.
These peaks become worse in hard switching conditions, which occur at higher output power.
But at high power the peaks are difficult to see on the scope, so it is helpful to run with zero input signal and simulate an output current be simply putting a resistor between output and positive rail, or output and negative rail. You do not need to go for 10A, already currents of 3A do usually show most of the hard switching headache.
 
I have a screen shot of this test without added DC load.
So it is not the worst situation. This were results, which I reached with my bread board. I hope to get it better with a reasonable layout. But already on the bread board the HF "blibs" were acceptable and by far less than the carrier. See posting 46.
http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=101774&perpage=25&pagenumber=2

Bruno is giving good & bad examples here:
http://www.hypex.nl/applications/emi.htm
But take care - he still has not corrected a typo in the time base. Correct time base for his screen shots is 500ns/grid.
 
But at high power the peaks are difficult to see on the scope, so it is helpful to run with zero input signal and simulate an output current be simply putting a resistor between output and positive rail, or output and negative rail. You do not need to go for 10A, already currents of 3A do usually show most of the hard switching headache.

Take care about what PSU that you use for that test ! ;)

regards

Charles
 
Evil answer: think it over!

Nice answer: in this case supply pumping is cancelled by load current, because load current flows from the pumped side of the supply. +10 A load current causes 5 A pumping in negative side, but the 10 A goes thru the load, and landed on negative side, so effective supply current is 5 A in normal direction on both side.
 
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