hfe Parameters

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I am planning to buy a few transistors for an amp I am making. The same transistors being manufactured by different manufacturers and that is why each one of them has a different hfe value. The hfe values range from 40 to 250.

My question is that.....is it okay if i decide to go with 40 hfe than 250. Devices with 250 hfe doubleible the price.

Does hfe matter a lot ? Does a low hfe value affect the performance of the circuit?

The transistor in question is BD 140.

Thanks
 
It's a simple class AB amp with BD 139 and BD 140 as drivers. OP transistors are 2n3773

Schematic attached.
 

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Idle current in TR2 is 29V/3.7K or 7mA.

Peak current in speaker is 29V/8 or 3.6A (3600mA).

If you don't have hFE of 3600/7 or 500, the driver will be unable to pull the load all the way to the rail.

Low end of your specs and Jon's data suggests you could have output stage gain like 40*20 or 800. "It works".

For lowest THD you want the TR3 TR4 drivers to be "very light" loading on TR2. "Very light" might be under 2mA. This demands total output stage gain of nearly 2,000. This could be 40 in each stage, or 80 in the BDs and 20 in the '3773s.

The 3055/3773 devices CAN have hFE as low as 20 around 4A. However most will be higher. Your BDs may have a minimum hFE of 40 but most will be higher.

> the performance of the circuit

Overall this is not what we today call "high performance". Consumer hi-fi moved past this 6-transistor (plus bias) design in the 1970s. However we made a LOT of good sound on amplifiers very much like this one, with similar "just enough" gain and drive. The THD number does not have a lot of zeros in it, but the sound can be good.

"Improved" amplifiers will have several more transistors of higher specs. But since you are concerned about transistor costs, this is not your path for today.

I say just build it. The low-hFE parts will be OK. If BD with hFE >80 are not much more, I would lean that way.

This amplifier design has no Protection. Do not short the output!
 
Idle current in TR2 is 29V/3.7K or 7mA.

Peak current in speaker is 29V/8 or 3.6A (3600mA).

If you don't have hFE of 3600/7 or 500, the driver will be unable to pull the load all the way to the rail.

Low end of your specs and Jon's data suggests you could have output stage gain like 40*20 or 800. "It works".

For lowest THD you want the TR3 TR4 drivers to be "very light" loading on TR2. "Very light" might be under 2mA. This demands total output stage gain of nearly 2,000. This could be 40 in each stage, or 80 in the BDs and 20 in the '3773s.

The 3055/3773 devices CAN have hFE as low as 20 around 4A. However most will be higher. Your BDs may have a minimum hFE of 40 but most will be higher.

> the performance of the circuit

Overall this is not what we today call "high performance". Consumer hi-fi moved past this 6-transistor (plus bias) design in the 1970s. However we made a LOT of good sound on amplifiers very much like this one, with similar "just enough" gain and drive. The THD number does not have a lot of zeros in it, but the sound can be good.

"Improved" amplifiers will have several more transistors of higher specs. But since you are concerned about transistor costs, this is not your path for today.

I say just build it. The low-hFE parts will be OK. If BD with hFE >80 are not much more, I would lean that way.

This amplifier design has no Protection. Do not short the output!

Got your point.....guesss I just have to build it and see.

I have taken special precautions of not shorting the output. This circuit has a optional short circuit protection but i haven't just implemented it yet.
 
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