Germanium preamp

Status
Not open for further replies.
The OC71 from the Mullard Reference Manual 1961

Wether or not this is of any use to you.

You can see the OC71 in practical circuits.

Andy
 

Attachments

  • 001.jpg
    001.jpg
    153.7 KB · Views: 1,886
  • 002.jpg
    002.jpg
    294.3 KB · Views: 1,526
  • 003.jpg
    003.jpg
    136.5 KB · Views: 1,637
i'm after a mic/instrument preamp that use a pnp germanium transistors , which the volume could go up to higher db before it begins to distort , and produce a headroom , i'm not sure if i add interstage transformer would add a headroom to the sound ?! , also to have a feedback knob which add amp feedback to the sound , the use is for electric guitar and acoustic miced guitar
 
1. find simple schematic with npn transistors only.
2. replace npn with pnp's
3. reverse all polarised components ( electrlytics)
4. reverse supply voltage
5. you're done.
😀

I understand why you would have to change these things if you swap
NPN/PNP. but how dose this get him to what he is after?

I asking cause I don't know. I'm not being a butt.
 
I can't see why you want to design a new circuit with PNP Germanium Onobtanium devices.

AFAIK Germanium went the same way as Gallium Arsenic for transistors. They only hold their own in Authentic Restoration Projects.

It's pretty easy to build a pre-amp with modern silicon transistors that will give you as much headroom as you want before clipping.
 
Last edited:
the reason is the sound , each transistor would provide you a kind of tone , the purpose again is for electric guitar and acoustic guitar , the sound from silicon is different from a germanium one , i know it easy to go with silicon that isnt my intend
 
There is a thread on here regarding a renowned FUZZ PEDAL which started its life with Germanium transistors. It might take some finding.

It's not difficult to produce a pre-amp, its basic electronic theory. The problems occur with power amps and load lines. What sort of Vcc are you intending on using and what sort of Pk-Pk output are you after ?

Germanium transistors are horrible when it comes to distortion so all the arguments about capacitor choice become largely irrelevant.

Their frequency response is also very poor when compared with their silcon brothers.
 
Last edited:
Frequency changers, you say? That title in AM rings a distant bell but I know it was used in vacuum tube days to describe a heterodyne mixer for shortwave use. Would that refer to UK Low band dual or shortwave equipped receivers? Just mixer/oscillator tubes in general?
 
Ah..so the term still applied in solid state times. It didn't here and only a few manufacturers used that 40 series Mullard? part numbers.

Well, a mixer/oscillator would tend to be good for all sorts of distortion so perhaps it could make a "special" fruity kind of audio distortion like a Dalek or chipmunk on vocals perhaps?
 
I've done a couple of distortion pedals with Ge transistors, and they certainly seem to sound different when overdriven. The OT is looking for something which is not clean, so possibly it makes sense to build something with Ge transistors. Chandler does so for studio equipment (eq, mike preamp), and seem to do fine.
There are a lot of interesting transistors, OC44 is pretty expensive, but there are a ton of others available more cheaply, depending on your location. There's stuff from russia, but also the AC*** series which are in a lot of stuff from the 60's and 70's.
Leakage is something to watch out for, so measure transistors before using them. I would just breadboard the circuit and work out biasing, then put it on perf.

On the ProdigyPro forum, member Kubarth has done a Ge mike preamp for studio use and it uses only one or two Ge stages for colour, the rest is "contemporary".

The reason for swapping out npn for pnp is that Ge transistors are commonly available in pnp but npn's are rare (and not as good).

If you are willing to buy on ebay, there's a guy in the UK is selling NOS military Ge pnp's, I bought a couple of batches from him and they are all low leakage, type is cv7355, IIRC

jerluwoo, that seems like an interesting schematic, think I'll give it a try, thanks!
 
Status
Not open for further replies.