Any advantage to Current Amplifiers?

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A current buffer Output Stage

this is what he uses
 

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Current etc

It should be clear that this is a voltage amplifier, because of the 100% local feedback in the output stage. Gain should be close to 1.

Whether there is any advantage in current-drive of speakers has been discussed elsewhere on this board.

But since this guy apparently doesn't know the difference between voltage and current amps anyway, I wonder about the usefullness of the rest of his arguments.

Jan Didden
 
"But since this guy apparently doesn't know the difference between voltage and current amps anyway"

It looks like a current amplifier to me, in the sense that the output current will be some multiple of the input current. In the same way that a BJT is a current amplifier.

I think what you are saying is that the input Z is all over the place. If this circuit were driven by a high Z current source then it would behave like a current amp.

On the subject of whether it matters whether it is best to control the output voltage to the speaker or output current, it is obvious the voltage must be controlled because of the way speakers are designed. Driving a speaker with a current proportional to the input voltage will not sound right. I know, I've done it.
 
traderbam said:
"But since this guy apparently doesn't know the difference between voltage and current amps anyway"

It looks like a current amplifier to me, in the sense that the output current will be some multiple of the input current. In the same way that a BJT is a current amplifier.

I think what you are saying is that the input Z is all over the place. If this circuit were driven by a high Z current source then it would behave like a current amp.
[snip]

Well, to me it is clear. This thing puts out (almost) exactly the same output voltage as the input voltage. Moreover, it does so irrespective of the load (within reason, of course). 10 Ohms, 100 Ohms, 100k Ohms, doesn't make any difference. This is the definition of a voltage source.

The output current is definitely NOT related to the input current in any way, but is only dependent on the load (and input voltage of course). Again, this is the definition of a voltage source.

The input Z is not all over the place, but is reasonably independent of the load. Vo=Vi means there is 100% feedback, so all the transistor gains are used to make the output voltage independent of the load -> voltage source. With a fixed input voltage, the output current will be whatever is necessary to maintain the same voltage at the output.

I don't see by what stretch of the imagination one could call this a current source.

Jan Didden

PS Someone above used the term "current buffer", which of course it is. But the designer specifically talked about "current drive of speakers", and that cannot be done with this circuit.
 
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