Gainclone Low Pass Filter

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I want to have a low pass filter on the input of my gainclone amp. it is used to drive my subwoofer, and i thouht that it would be easier to have a LPF on the input, than to make on for the output. i am aiming for approx 80hz cutoff. im guessing this would be done with a capacitor and resistor?
 
try this

Its been posted before, search for pllxo, but I think this is one of the sites the thread refers to

http://www.t-linespeakers.org/tech/filters/passiveHLxo.html

Thought about this for the car "sub" amp - they're 6" 4R 125watt nominal cheapies & a capacitor from the network point to phone converters in the office (PABX or secondary device selector) is polypropelene 185nF 250v which would give a F of 86Hz on 10k resistor & 172Hz on 5k

Cheers

Paul
 
Hi Matt,

The link I posted is for putting in-front of the amp, it can just about be built into a matchbox size box with inputs for your rca leads & outputs that plug straight into your amp.

Component count is 1 cap & 1 resistor so its cheap as hell to try it & since the frequency point changes with the resistance you can even try a 10k resistor in parallel with a 10k & a 50k pot - that would give you a variable resistance from 5k to about 8.5k for experimentation. On my car setup idea that would result in a frequency cutoff of 172 to 100 Hz on a 185nF capacitor.

As always I haven't got round to trying this yet. I asked Santa for a few more hours a day for Christmas.

Cheers

Paul
 
Paulr said:
Hi Matt,

The link I posted is for putting in-front of the amp, it can just about be built into a matchbox size box with inputs for your rca leads & outputs that plug straight into your amp.

a high-order filter usually is done on the feedback loop. get a National OPamp databook and it should have plenty of them.
 
millwood said:


a high-order filter usually is done on the feedback loop. get a National OPamp databook and it should have plenty of them.

Or you can go to the link I gave. It's an interactive page for opamp based filters, let's you define for 2-8 pole filter, define different filter types, gain, freqency, and maybe a few other things, then spits out a schematic, parts values etc.

randy
 
Hi mattt,

If you put a 1st order low pass just before the input (one resistor and one cap) I read somewhere that you will drop the signal about 3db or so. If you use a pot with the right range, you could even have a variable cut-off frequency. I prefer dip switches and specific resistor values myself.

If you are willing to live with the extra device, make it active and use a line level opamp (like NE5532, TL0xx, OPA6xx, etc) with a gain of 2 or so to bring the level back to previous. With a 78xx volt reg, you could probably even power it off the GC supply without any significant losses to your GC. Of course, you'd have to open up your amp and add this stuff, but then you would have an "invisible" solution.

I know the GC purists will hate it, but depending on how good your sub driver is, you may not even notice the extra .00x% distortion placed by the extra components.

You also might to add a 5-10Hz high pass (yet 1 more RC) just to keep the DC out of it.

🙂ensen
 
Can any one give me some input on this xover that was passed on to me..
 

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