Masterpiece

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The Pardise needs the big elcaps to make an AC path at the low frequencies. The high path is formed by the emitter impedance of the input stage in series with the electrolytics.. The formula is simply R x C.
So when R is low you need a big electrolytic or the gain drops in the bass.

There was no misunderstanding after all...

Stefanoo... how did you solve it without the caps then ? Is it because you are using fets ?
 
it is because I am setting an AC path to ground with the feedback resistor to ground.
This contribute to set the gain.
Now why it is not possible to obtain the same gain using a resistor instead of a capacitor goes beyond my understanding now.
 
Stefanoo and Joachim,
This is an entire preamp section and the RIAA section for a turntable input or is this just the turntable section that we are looking at here? I am assuming it is the pre and Riaa section. Stefanoo are you going to produce any boards that others could build or is this just for your personal pleasure? It does look very advanced in design and complexity but what are we here for if not to build the best and push the limits.

Steven
 
Stefanoo and Joachim,
This is an entire preamp section and the RIAA section for a turntable input or is this just the turntable section that we are looking at here? I am assuming it is the pre and Riaa section. Stefanoo are you going to produce any boards that others could build or is this just for your personal pleasure? It does look very advanced in design and complexity but what are we here for if not to build the best and push the limits.

Steven

It is a complete RIAA section amplification just not included yet as we are still evaluating the topology and possible changes to it.
It is probably not going to be produced for DIY purposes and just as you noticed the complexity is a bit great for the "average" DIYer here.
But if you or anybody follows this thread will have all the elements to build his own.
 
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