This is my take on the well-known Elektor PreConsonant phono stage. It has been fully built and tested; in fact, I am using it as my main phono stage at the moment. I have finally got around to correcting small silkscreen errors on the PCB, and now I feel comfortable sharing it with the community.
This is what an assembled PCB looks like:
Thanks to @vsmusic for inspiration, it was his post about the PreConsonant over at Lenco Heaven that started my addiction to DIY phono stages, and I even learned how to use KiCAD to design my own PCBs.
I also designed a very simple discrete voltage regulator to go with it. It probably does not perform as well as common 3-pin regulator ICs, but I wanted to use a 24V AC wall-wart that has very poor load regulation. Its no-load voltage is almost 30V, which after rectification exceeds the maximum input voltage of something like a 7824 or LM317. In use I cannot detect any PSU-related hum even with my ear right against the speaker.
Gerbers, BOM and build notes are available here: https://github.com/SpinningVinyl/PreConsonant2021
Gerbers and BOM for the PSU: https://github.com/SpinningVinyl/PreConsonantPSU
This is what an assembled PCB looks like:
Thanks to @vsmusic for inspiration, it was his post about the PreConsonant over at Lenco Heaven that started my addiction to DIY phono stages, and I even learned how to use KiCAD to design my own PCBs.
I also designed a very simple discrete voltage regulator to go with it. It probably does not perform as well as common 3-pin regulator ICs, but I wanted to use a 24V AC wall-wart that has very poor load regulation. Its no-load voltage is almost 30V, which after rectification exceeds the maximum input voltage of something like a 7824 or LM317. In use I cannot detect any PSU-related hum even with my ear right against the speaker.
Gerbers, BOM and build notes are available here: https://github.com/SpinningVinyl/PreConsonant2021
Gerbers and BOM for the PSU: https://github.com/SpinningVinyl/PreConsonantPSU
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Very neat and tidy looking design. 👍
I have one remark on the use of discrete voltage regulators. Their input voltage range is actually a voltage differential range since they are floating devices. So as long as the input to output voltage is not exceded, they are OK to be applied. I never knew this for the longest time, but it's in the documentation. The below is from page 2 of TI's LM317.
The regulator is floating and detects only the input-to-output differential voltage. Thus, supplies of several hundred volts are regulated as long as the maximum input-to-output differential is not exceeded. That is, avoid short-circuiting the output.
I have one remark on the use of discrete voltage regulators. Their input voltage range is actually a voltage differential range since they are floating devices. So as long as the input to output voltage is not exceded, they are OK to be applied. I never knew this for the longest time, but it's in the documentation. The below is from page 2 of TI's LM317.
The regulator is floating and detects only the input-to-output differential voltage. Thus, supplies of several hundred volts are regulated as long as the maximum input-to-output differential is not exceeded. That is, avoid short-circuiting the output.
Thank you for your kind words, @arjen6t8!
And thanks for the information about voltage regulator ICs, that's super interesting! Also I guess it should survive for a while even when the output is shorted, because then the output from the transformer would drop quite significantly. Oh well, at least now I know how to calculate component values for a discrete feedback regulator.
And thanks for the information about voltage regulator ICs, that's super interesting! Also I guess it should survive for a while even when the output is shorted, because then the output from the transformer would drop quite significantly. Oh well, at least now I know how to calculate component values for a discrete feedback regulator.
Remember, that this ONLY applies to 317/337 and similar. NOT for the 78xx/79xx 😉Very neat and tidy looking design. 👍
I have one remark on the use of discrete voltage regulators. Their input voltage range is actually a voltage differential range since they are floating devices. So as long as the input to output voltage is not exceded, they are OK to be applied. I never knew this for the longest time, but it's in the documentation. The below is from page 2 of TI's LM317.
The regulator is floating and detects only the input-to-output differential voltage. Thus, supplies of several hundred volts are regulated as long as the maximum input-to-output differential is not exceeded. That is, avoid short-circuiting the output.
Not for all, it seems, at least not for the LM79xx according to the datasheet. It talks about an output to input max. voltage differential.Remember, that this ONLY applies to 317/337 and similar. NOT for the 78xx/79xx
I don't see this mentioned for the uA78xx / uA79xx
Perhaps an LM79xx (and LM78xx ?) are internally fixed output voltage LM317/318's?
That can´t be. They both have "Ground" as reference. Lift the ground to 3 volts on a 7812, and you have a 7815.Perhaps an LM79xx (and LM78xx ?) are internally fixed output voltage LM317/318's?