Hi all,
I was recently told not to use sockets to mount "fast" opamps.
I am building a crossover using opa2134s. Is this a fast opamp? And if I may, is it slew rate that defines how fast an op amp, and what is the value?
thanks,
gary
I was recently told not to use sockets to mount "fast" opamps.
I am building a crossover using opa2134s. Is this a fast opamp? And if I may, is it slew rate that defines how fast an op amp, and what is the value?
thanks,
gary
Sockets take the power pins on the IC that little bit further away from any on board decoupling, and add a little inductance and resistance along the way.
So good practice is to add a small cap in the 0.01 to 0.1 range directly soldered on to the IC to maintain a low impedance path at HF. Do that and you won't have problems.
The OPA2134 is a "fast" opamp for audio, but it's all relative. There are far "faster" device around.
The GBW (gain/bandwidth figure) and slew rate are related for voltage feedback devices such as here.
Gain-bandwidth product - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
So good practice is to add a small cap in the 0.01 to 0.1 range directly soldered on to the IC to maintain a low impedance path at HF. Do that and you won't have problems.
The OPA2134 is a "fast" opamp for audio, but it's all relative. There are far "faster" device around.
The GBW (gain/bandwidth figure) and slew rate are related for voltage feedback devices such as here.
Gain-bandwidth product - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Status
- Not open for further replies.