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#1 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Cagliari, Sardinia
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Hi to you all, is there anyone of you that has used that transformer as a phase splitter? I'm thinking about using N channel MOSFet only for the output stage of an amplifier in class A. Has anyone any imput?
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#2 |
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diyAudio Moderator
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I've done this with my tube-fet hybrid driver. It works fine as long as you get the load impedance right (10K) or use an RC series network with a higher load resistance. If you do a search on "SYclotron", you can see the schematic of what I did.
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“Listening to records is like ****ing a picture of Brigitte Bardot.” - Sergiu Celibidache |
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#3 |
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The one and only
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I think I would see if Jensen has something geared around a
lower impedance, as the Mosfet capacitance may exceed the design of that particular transformer. |
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#4 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Cagliari, Sardinia
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Tank you for reply. I'm trying to reduce power dissipated, but i don't want to use complementary push-pull with hexfet since they are not so complementary.
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#5 |
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The one and only
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I realize that people might expect better performance from
identical plus and minus parts, but I think that you get those benefits only under certain limited conditions. In general, I don't find that inexact complements are much of a performance problem, and are probably less problematic than inserting a transformer in the circuit. |
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#6 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Columbia, SC
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Nelson,
All right...I'll take the bait. If you can spare a minute, please elaborate on the case of the non-complementary complements (insulting complements, perhaps?). It seems intuitive that to get good results the Ns and the Ps should be as close as possible to precise mirror images of one another. It's not the first time that something "obvious" has turned out to be false, so I can't say that I'm surprised, but you've managed to make my curiosity itch. Grey |
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#7 | |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Sacramento, CA
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Quote:
If you know what sort of capacitance you're dealing with, you can EMail Jensen and they can help you with a compensation network. But you might also consider using an output transformer instead. The JT-11SS-DLCF would be a good candidate. It's less expensive than the 11P-1 and it's low impedance so you shouldn't have the problems with capacitance that you would with the 11P-1. The thing you have to concern yourself with is if any of the sources are capacitively coupled. Because output transformers have such low primary inductance, in order to avoid low frequency resonant peaks you need to make sure that the coupling capacitance is sufficient. Instead of the usual 2uF or so that works ok in most situations, you'd need to bring it up to several hundred uF. If your sources are direct coupled and you haven't much DC offset, you should be just fine. se |
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#8 | |
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The one and only
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Quote:
device whose current is increasing to match the nonlinearity of its complement as the current decreases so that the two distortions cancel. Perfect matching (both devices having the same curve exactly) does not guarantee this. Like a triode on a resistive load line, you get some first order cancellation of distortion, but it's never perfect. |
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#9 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Columbia, SC
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Aye, that's kinda what I meant by mirror image--one zigs whilst the other zags, net result being a straight line in the sense of plus one and minus one summing to zero. But if they aren't truly complementary you've got a pig and a bag, and they won't cancel one another. From what you're saying, I gather that even a little bit is a net improvement, regardless of precise mirror imaging.
Yes? Grey |
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#10 |
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The one and only
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Absolutely, and not at all trivial. I have seen reductions by
a factor of as much as 10:1 from such cancellations, carefully chosen in differential pairs, but I haven't seen that much improvement in complementary followers in output stages. |
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