Optimal bias in push-pull EF output stage: textbooks and reality

Your circuit is not so good, if you want better results use 3 or 4 step emitter follower and cascode vas. Faster matched power transistor will be improved the result as well.

I suggest you to try to measure the distortion in different temperatures and how the bias has changed.
 
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You'd be surprised at what some can hear under informal conditions. Yet you can have in excess of 1% distortion that isn't immediately identified. We are talking normal music played as they typically would. They eventually get that something sounds off. By the same token, over time some extremely minor distortion can be noticed.

It really depends on what distortion there is and how it affects the sound. But looking at a needle will not get you there.
 
This is an example of transfer function of a MOSFET power amp with error correction. Again, gain as a function of input voltage and idle current. The higher the idle current, the more linear the gain is, though there is no optimum. Just compromises.

MOSFET_EC2.png
 
Exactly Jan!

Hi Ed,
Distortion spectra is always important. I just serviced a large tube power amp, now I have a solid state one on the bench. Both very good designs and brand names. Some distortion is audible no matter their frequency, although in the peak of your ear sensitivity is the worst for obvious reasons. How the distortion products relate to the stimulus that created them is important too.

We can safely say, the less distortion in all it's forms, the better. That is what I strive for and clients have agreed with me for decades.
 
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Since the bias current runs through both resistors, one only one bias can be adjusted to 'optimal', the other then isn't.
But apparently, equalising the gain/local feedback for the two halves lowers the distortion more than the increase from non-optimal bias on one side.
Is the 0.2 ohms on the NPN?

Jan
 
Dear Pavel,

I very much like your claim to question "recipes" and not just measurement alone.
Creating a bird's wing diagram is a very simple task with MC12. But regardless of gm-doubling, double cross and Nicks class ABBA, looking at the static transmission behavior of the OPS in the OL & CL case is fantastic.

I am very curious to see how this information thread will develop.
You are looking at the whole thing and not just the ordinary push-pull output stage.


HBt.
 
Is it a general rule? My experience says that sometimes yes, sometimes no, depending on the amplifier circuit. (...)
Please give more examples of “yes” (type A) and “no” (type B). It seems that the topic of optimal V_BE is dependent on the overall topology (and perhaps also on the dimensioning), so sometimes yes and sometimes no.

Once again as a reminder:
everything revolves around the transfer (cross over) distortion of a trivial push-pull output stage. And how the snot affects the global nfb. Or to put it the other way round: what is a feedback system ... and so on?

The whole subject of “bias or quiescent current” and "switch on" and "switch off" is honestly a hackneyed, endless topic.
But to look at the scenario with a little more serenity and, above all, to investigate it again and again in practice using measurement technology ...

wow!

Douglas Self's recommendations for the “blameless topology and design rules” apply without restriction. Point taken.


kindly,
HBt.
 
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Let me reference Nelson Pass' document. https://www.firstwatt.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/art_the_square_law.pdf

He mentioned putting degenerating resistor could help flat out the output resistance of the bjt push pull output stage, but he did not say how big the resistor or how much the bias is.

That also confirms that there would be an optimal degenerating resistance by given the bias current, although we don't know how to calculate the value.

1749928798782.png



PS: From the chart, I can see the degenerated resistance is about twice of the no degeneration. Can I say the added resistor is about Vt/Ibias?
 
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Simulation of BJT devices at low currents is usually far from accurate. My main concern about the low theoretical optimum current is "thermal memory" causing temporary under bias. A short term over bias if a device has got hot is going to cause far less distortion rise. Under bias would happen if the Vbe multiplier compensation got warmed and then loud music stopped, allowing the outputs to cool.
I suspect the CFP configuration is less vulnerable to this.