Simple Class B or AB Mosfet Amp

Locking for a Simple Class B or AB Mosfet Amp schematic

Hi. I am locking for a schematic of a simple class B or AB mosfet amplifier.
I found one which I thought was the ideal, with IRF540/IRF9540, but it does not work.
18-w-mosfet-amplifier-circuit.jpg

Someone knows a schematic of a simple (1~2 transistors + 2 mosfet - preferably IRF) class B or AB mosfet amplifier that works? 20~30W is enought.
The use is for guitar.
Thanks.
 
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Output power is a matter of the voltage you feed it. You could run the NMOS200 on +/- 25V supplies easily.

If you want a "simple" amplifier, build a chipamp. LM3886 is fine for low power guitar duty and is even used by some of the big names for this purpose.
 
...there is no thermal compensation so the amp will overheat and fail...

Not necessarily, if the bias is low enough and the heatsink is big enough, than thermal runaway should not happen, especially with mosfet devices.

Kem try this one:
An externally hosted image should be here but it was not working when we last tested it.


It should do the trick.
R4 is for setting the midpoint between the mosfets ( the output before the capacitor ) at half the Vcc. R11 is for biasing the mosfets, you could replace the zener diode with a couple more of 4148 and fixing them to the heatsink in some way, should give you some thermal compensation for the bias. You may have to increase R11's vallue to be able to get proper bias.

Good luck.
 
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Yes, you can use that one ( i see 106 code on it ).
C1 reduces the AC impedance of the biasing network ( D1, D3 and R11 ), thus making sure the output devices see about the same signal. It's value is not fixed at that 10uF, it can be less without any problem, but 10uF at low voltage is quite cheap, so...

About the input, it needs about 1V peak to fully drive it ( 0.707Vrms ), so the signal source amplitude should not be a problem, but you do need a low output impedance source, so i would recommend using either an opamp preamplifier or if you need to use a transistor preamp, then you can use an opamp buffer.

Feel free to ask anything you need to know 🙂
 
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