BIAS network recommendations

Hey DIY'ers

I'm shooting in the blind and need some help with the BIAS network.

Do you have any suggestions to implant an 2SA1837 PNP-transistor to this circuit. I want a more stable design.

27Hneqt64mBjnUtU9


Best regards
 
Last edited:
The "trick" with this circuit is to make R65 variable and set the ratio of the base resistors of
Q15 to the exact ratio you need. Therefore if you have a driver-output pair giving 4 Vbe's to compensate, the resistor ratio should be 3:1, if you have a 6Vbe triplet then it should be 5:1. By altering R65 you adjust the current in Q15 to give the base voltage needed for the bias. No need for a 1N4148. The PNP can be mounted on the PCB but Q15 on the output/driver heatsink.
The currents (hence value of R65) need to be carefully selected due to the range of Vbe's possible.
I generally use a 220 ohm plust 10k for this adjustment.
High gain transistors are preferable.
 
The "trick" with this circuit is to make R65 variable and set the ratio of the base resistors of
Q15 to the exact ratio you need. Therefore if you have a driver-output pair giving 4 Vbe's to compensate, the resistor ratio should be 3:1, if you have a 6Vbe triplet then it should be 5:1.
How would you approx estimate the VBE on this one from the looks of the schematic in ratio as mentioned above?
Shared album - Kåre Nielsen - Google Photos

Best regards
 
hcpower, you have given us about 10% of the info needed to formulate an answer.

To dream up a good BIAS network, you have to consider,

  • the actual output stage: double emitter follower, complementary pairs, different arrangements of triples
  • 'emitter' resistors, their sizes & location
  • location of the 'bias' sensor: heatsink, on the output devices, on the drivers
  • mounting of the 'bias' sensor including any 'thermal insulation'
  • size of heatsink
  • driver stage
You can't separate the design of the bias network from the output stage (including its heatsinking)

Douglas Self has a whole chapter on this; some of which is good and some suspect. I think Bob Cordell has a better chapter in his latest book
 
Last edited:
How would you approx estimate the VBE on this one from the looks of the schematic in ratio as mentioned above?
Shared album - Kåre Nielsen - Google Photos
Your output stage uses triple emitter followers; six Vbe junctions. Your bias network has to provide 6 Vbe voltage drops.

But I can tell you that this type of output stage has TERRIBLE thermal stability.

Let us know what you end up with, do some (real life) tests on thermal stability and let us know.
 
The circuit you showed has only 4 Vbe's as far as I can see. There are two pairs of drivers (in parallel) each feeding four output transistors in parallel, so essentially there are just four equivalent junctions to compensate.
The bias circuit I suggested was one I developed specifically for a triplet output stage (pre-driver+driver+parallelled output devices x2) which gave better thermal stability than a single transistor bias.
I mentioned it first some years ago in this forum on another thread somewhere.
For a [driver(pair)+ output (octet)]x2 you may get adequate control from a single bias transistor but it depends on the Vbe of the bias transistor at the current in the VAS stage, but also compared with the current in the driver stage. And the Early effect.
For example if the VAS current is 6mA (usually too low BTW but a popular value) and the bias transistor a BD139, and the driver transistors BD139-BD140 also passing 6mA the Vbe's wont match because the drivers will see a high voltage (30-40V) compared with the bias (2.4V), requiring the Vbe of the bias to be greater. So the "Vbe multiplier" ratio will still end up in the region of 3.5 or so compared with the 4 needed.
The complementary bias arrangement gives you exactly 4Vbe's or any other multiple you need by selecting the resistor ratio and changing the Vbe instead.
 
Last edited:
Shared album - Kåre Nielsen - Google Photos
Your output stage uses triple emitter followers; six Vbe junctions. Your bias network has to provide 6 Vbe voltage drops.
Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa. 😱

john_ellis is right. Your O/P stage is a double emitter follower .. ie 4 Vbe junctions. MUCH better thermal stability than triple emitter followers. It is also the least sensitive to misset bias current.

My excuse is poor eyesight and your c**p pic 🙂

For this, Nelson Pass's "simple Vbe multiplier ( npn + 2 resistors )" is as good as anything fancier.

MUCH more important is where & how you place the sensing device. See Self's book for details. IIRC, his recommendations for this type of O/P stage are OK
 
I agree. The simple npn+2 resistors (usually 2 + pot in fact) has worked well for all the double emitter follower stages I have built.
The complementary stage was only developed for a triple EF design, but it works well.
It does appear to be slightly better on the double EF but is more complicated.
Positioning the sense transistor is an interesting exercise in itself.
You can calculate the thermal impedance path from the output and drivers to ambient, and as the heatsink temperature will not be as great as the junction of the output device (usually the hottest) you would conclude that you need a greater multiple of Vbe than the 4 I suggested, by the ratio of the thermal impedances.
However if you put the bias right next to an output device (such as on the metal can but insulated) 4Vbe's could over-compensate because the output device(s) is/are hotter than the drivers. (Usually).
Putting the sense device on the same heatsink as the driver and output is a compromise that worked for me in many designs. This may explain why the simple multiplier circuit actually works as well as it does.
 
The circuit shown in #8 controls the VAS current by resistors on the input differential loads and emitters of the VAS transistors. This configuration more or less has to have these or as you suggest the VAS current could be all over the place.
The downside is that the gain in the VAS stage will be limited and rather less than could be achieved, and the Darlington-like pairs probably add little to the performance, as the resistors I mentioned need to be large enough to control the current.
If the resistor ratios are quite high (and I can't read the component values!!!) then Hawksford's additional resistor in the bias network might be worthwhile in this instance.