| zenon |
I read some posts on the Power Supply forum about actively "filtering" out noise from power supplies. They referenced this site:
http://www.wenzel.com/documents/finesse.html
Has anyone tried to do something like this for Chip Amps??
Any ideas why it may/may not work??
TIA |
|
|
| harvardian |
Certainly possible
1) Most of the chip amps have decent PSRR anyways.
2) You would need to scale for the current. May need to heat sink the pass device. |
|
|
| lndm |
| If you're considering a 1 ohm series resistor, a simple RC made of the resistor and 10,000uF of capacitance is going to give you a few dBs better filtering, or even 2 ohms, or two stages. The series resistor may even relax ringing in the electrolytics, if there is any. Just a thought. |
|
|
| ew |
| could a rc filter be used to knock the voltage down by 2-4volts? |
|
|
| lndm |
| quote: | Originally posted by ew
could a rc filter be used to knock the voltage down by 2-4volts? | Yes, but this is more sucessful with an amp that has a more constant draw of current. It is often done with class A amps. You could make sure you had a large enough cap after the dropping resistor but that'd average out the drop which would be less at amp idle, and more under heavy use.
A regulator would be a more consistent way to burn some volts, if you can afford the volts. |
|
|
| AndrewT |
Hi,
or try a capacitance multiplier in lieu of the regulator, or maybe even the resistor.
If going for RC then it would be more effective if it were
R/2 , 2C , R/2 , 2C , but at the considerable cost of four times as much capacitance. |
|
|
| zenon |
Andrew, can you make a diagram of what you mean?
I don't know how that would be wired etc. |
|
|
| AndrewT |
Hi,
the diagram is already "here".
But maybe it wants to go somewhere in Canada, or is that where you would like to be? |
|
|
|