latest version of Lizi

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After a few months of trial and error,finally she is ready to rock n roll

attachment.php
 
hey Leolabs

Guess you forgot to reduce size of your schematic ( 3529x2528 ).
I attach a PNG version that fits a normal screen well.

Now folks,
lets explore and find out some good details of
this minimalistic Lateral MOSFET Amplifier creation.

lineup
 

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mikeks said:


On the contrary, they are useless in every case.

Nope, lowering vas z-out using these is beneficial... Not only to my ears. 😉
Also, they expand OL-bandwidth, and reduce openloop distortion ~the same amount they reduce openloop gain.
Also, you don't want the capacitance of the mosfet gates to be the only load to the vas, unless you prefer to listen to integrators. (The PIM story)

Mike
 
MikeB said:


Nope, lowering vas z-out using these is beneficial... Not only to my ears. 😉
Also, they expand OL-bandwidth, and reduce openloop distortion ~the same amount they reduce openloop gain.
Also, you don't want the capacitance of the mosfet gates to be the only load to the vas, unless you prefer to listen to integrators. (The PIM story)

Mike

Wrong; in all respects.

They reduce foward-path gain, which means they reduce loop-gain, which means they increase distortion.

You do NOT reduce ''PIM'' or other dubious distortion mechanisms by reducing loop-gain. Period.

They do NOT ameliorate ability to drive MOSFET capacitance, as this remains unchanged regardless.

Indeed, they merely siphon off current that would otherwise be used to drive said capacitance.

A complete nonsense.


:smash:
 
mikeks said:

They reduce foward-path gain, which means they reduce loop-gain, which means they increase distortion.

Not complete nonsense... Could you please read my whole post ?
Yes, they reduce loop-gain, but as they linearize the vas by "protecting" it against the terrible dynamic load from the outputstage the overall distortion level reduces at high freqs.
If you insist in optimizing an amp for 1khz, skip these resistors...

I should know better to not have started again this ugly discussion.
Go, heat up your soldering iron and compare by ear the difference between rloaded vas and pure capacitive loaded vas.
And yes, books say that flat OL-bandwidth is nonsense, again try and LISTEN the difference !

Mike
 
MikeB said:
Yes, they reduce loop-gain, but as they linearize the vas by "protecting" it against the terrible dynamic load from the outputstage the overall distortion level reduces at high freqs.

You cannot ''linearize the vas'' by increasing the loading at its output.

This neccesarily reduces its local gain, which must increase its non-linearity, and in no way ''protects'' it from ''the terrible dynamic load from the outputstage'', for it merely worsens it.

This is because these shunt resistors are in parallel with the input impedance of the output stage, and, therefore, can only reduce the effective impedance ''seen'' by the second stage.
 
mikeks said:
Why ''with the feedback loop opened''?

Because of openloop distortion. Openloop distortion will be reduced by feedback, but as additional gift you get "upfolded" high order harmonics. (The distorted distortions thing) Because of this, openloop distortions need to be kept reasonably low and openloop bandwidth high to have feedback reserves to reduce these new high order distortions which have much higher frequency than the ones to be compensated.

BTW, this was the only weakness of NFB i was able to prove with virtual devices in sims.

Mike
 
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