Hello world
I have an amp simulated and as real device, but I've some problems to simulate it's open loop gain. Is there anything out as info that can you recommend to read ?
Next problem is the compensation of the amp....At the moment there's only the capacitor across B-C of the VAS transistor...but there I must put >300pF in to get the amp stable at any load (in the real world). What's about a second order pole in the feedback ? In the simulation that works fine...but in real world ?????
Thanks.....
I have an amp simulated and as real device, but I've some problems to simulate it's open loop gain. Is there anything out as info that can you recommend to read ?
Next problem is the compensation of the amp....At the moment there's only the capacitor across B-C of the VAS transistor...but there I must put >300pF in to get the amp stable at any load (in the real world). What's about a second order pole in the feedback ? In the simulation that works fine...but in real world ?????
Thanks.....
Attachments
as PDF:
http://www.ac-vogel.de/TheAmp_MK2/2010-06-30/AMPII_VASUpdatecomplete_SCH_2010-06-30.pdf
and see pic
http://www.ac-vogel.de/TheAmp_MK2/2010-06-30/AMPII_VASUpdatecomplete_SCH_2010-06-30.pdf
and see pic
Attachments
Ok... I've found something about testing OL gain in simulation (making the feedback R from output to some MOhms and replacing the feedback resistor to ground by 10F (!) ).
So I've Open Loop gain... the compensation in the simulation works fine (just where I want it) and I also get best results in simulation... but bad results in real world :-(
One prototype (breadboard) is performing well... the PCB type seems to be instable.... mhhhh... can the emitter resistors make an amplifier unstable ? There where other types on the breadboard than on the PCB....
So I've Open Loop gain... the compensation in the simulation works fine (just where I want it) and I also get best results in simulation... but bad results in real world :-(
One prototype (breadboard) is performing well... the PCB type seems to be instable.... mhhhh... can the emitter resistors make an amplifier unstable ? There where other types on the breadboard than on the PCB....
strange , this is almost the same as my "AX" which runs stable down to 22pF ??
edit , GET RID of the Darlington drivers !!! (tip 102/107) most likely they are the problem.
OS
Why not darlingtons ? capacity too high ? They make unbelievable current gain
Why not darlingtons ? capacity too high ? They make unbelievable current gain
Oscillation city... standard MJE15032/33 drivers will give 2k hfe in a standard EF2 output stage and will allow the "blameless" to run on a single 33/47pF Cdom rock solid. I don't lie , i'm building my 10th pair of your amp "ax" below.
OS
Attachments
i've always done the OLG measurement " the hard way".... feed a 1uv signal in with no feedback, and tweak the dc offset of the simulated signal source until the output comes off the rails. once i get a useable output signal, i measure the amplitude and do the gain calculation. it helps to terminate the inverting input with a resistor the same value as what you use for Rser of the signal source to balance the input bias currents. it takes a lot of test runs of the sim just to get the output offset anywhere near normal and i'm sure parameter stepping would save some time here. there are also other ways to measure the OLG that use some clever sim tricks. these can be found in the file section of the LTSpice yahoo group.
Whats about 2SA1930 / 2SC5171 as driver instead of TIP10x ?
It s just another world...
From the 1976 VW Golf 1 to a current Audi TT.....
I dont know if you have told your voltage supply.
I will assume clear below +/-40 Volt
Input stage.
Think it looks very good. The idea is absolutely right.
I am unsure how much current you have here.
You use a GREEN LED + MJE350 for current source.
My guess is above 2.5 mA per input transistor.
Now, almost nobody uses green LED.
Because RED LED + transistor gives more constant current. A better current source.
If we assume < 40V and 5 mA we can use BC560C in CCS (constant current source)
Because less than 200 mWatt is okay for a 500 mW device.
(I would say we should avoid to get above 250 mWatt for 500 mWatt devices.
That is, for small signal transistors do not use more than max 50% of the max power rating)
I be back with some thoughts on VAS, if you want.
But Ostripper has already given some good advices.
He is very clever and knows much. More than me
I will assume clear below +/-40 Volt
Input stage.
Think it looks very good. The idea is absolutely right.
I am unsure how much current you have here.
You use a GREEN LED + MJE350 for current source.
My guess is above 2.5 mA per input transistor.
Now, almost nobody uses green LED.
Because RED LED + transistor gives more constant current. A better current source.
If we assume < 40V and 5 mA we can use BC560C in CCS (constant current source)
Because less than 200 mWatt is okay for a 500 mW device.
(I would say we should avoid to get above 250 mWatt for 500 mWatt devices.
That is, for small signal transistors do not use more than max 50% of the max power rating)
I be back with some thoughts on VAS, if you want.
But Ostripper has already given some good advices.
He is very clever and knows much. More than me
and see pic
If I interpret your schematic correctly it seems feedback is taken from the wrong side of the output L//R network.
Furthermore, the VAS may be destroyed by clipping in its current configuration. You might want to fix that. A collector resistor for T17 or an antisaturation diode across the miller cap could solve this issue.
I am unsure how much current you have here.
You use a GREEN LED + MJE350 for current source.
My guess is above 2.5 mA per input transistor.
Now, almost nobody uses green LED.
Because RED LED + transistor gives more constant current. A better current source.
You can use green led as current source , the only difference is 2.2v Vf instead of of 1.65-1.7V for red LED. A 150R Re for the red led might be a 180-200Re for the "greenie" , no biggie!! Do the math . (or let the sim do it for you)
I use all 4 colors (blue/green/red/yellow) , even for CCS's.
OS
- Status
- This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.
- Home
- Amplifiers
- Solid State
- OpenLoop Gain and compensation