I decided to cascode my F5T to protect the JFETs. To my dismay, the imaging is slight off center towards the right now. :-(
I have biased the channels more or less to the same voltage level.
What can I do to fix this?
I have biased the channels more or less to the same voltage level.
What can I do to fix this?
How do I do that?
Not sure it is exactly correct, but I do this way:
Input - 1kHz sine wave. Output - 8Ohm resistor, about 2.83VAC. Compare input AC voltage to output AC voltage and you will have gain at 1kHz, 1W.
majority of regular DVM are happy dealing with signals in range of 400-1KHz
absolute value of voltage isn't critical , just relative - comparing input with output voltage
absolute value of voltage isn't critical , just relative - comparing input with output voltage
simple programs , free from net , will do that
all you need is any sort of computer with even crudest sound card
quality isn't important
for instance https://www.google.com/search?q=sigjenny&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8
all you need is any sort of computer with even crudest sound card
quality isn't important
for instance https://www.google.com/search?q=sigjenny&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8
Didn't think much of SigJenny I'm afraid. It wouldn't work even with a Virtual Cable program installed, kept complaining there was no wave input available. Too old tech, probably worked fine with Win95 but hasn't been updated.
This one seems to work but has no sweep function:
https://sourceforge.net/projects/audmes/files/?source=navbar
https://sourceforge.net/projects/audmes/files/?source=navbar
Download the desired sine as *.wav or any other audio file and play it through your default audio player.... or am I missing something?
You can drive both channels with a common signal (music is fine) and
place any AC voltmeter across the hot outputs. If they have the same
gain then you won't read any AC. If it's only a few mV, then perhaps
that's not the problem.
place any AC voltmeter across the hot outputs. If they have the same
gain then you won't read any AC. If it's only a few mV, then perhaps
that's not the problem.
Connecting a speaker to the +outputs of both channels and play a mono signal through both channels. The speaker should be dead silent, as it is going to play any differences between the two. In practice you can still have a bit of sound, but no significant output.
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