• WARNING: Tube/Valve amplifiers use potentially LETHAL HIGH VOLTAGES.
    Building, troubleshooting and testing of these amplifiers should only be
    performed by someone who is thoroughly familiar with
    the safety precautions around high voltages.

OPT unbalance

I continue testing with the oscilloscope, and when I put on the square wave, which is not very good because it comes from the cell phone's function generator, at maximum gain I hear a slight hiss coming from the amplifier, what is this due to? Is my amp oscillating?
 
It is a 1khz square wave, with an 8ohm load.
What you hear with all the gain is the square wave tone, but it doesn't come out of the cell phone, something oscillating?


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Looks about right, for a square wave with sharp filtering and low phase shift.
Use DC input coupling to avoid the tilt. Show only 1 or 2 cycles, with better focus.

The "ringing" is from the ABSENCE of higher harmonics.
 

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Not good or bad, that's just the way it is. All systems are inherently low pass.
If you lower the input frequency, there will be less ringing, because there will be more harmonics,
since the bandwidth is constant.

Guess what a 20kHz square wave would look like if recorded on a standard red book CD.
Answer: a sine wave. No harmonics at all.
 
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The other thread is "Riddle me this . . .
It is 53 Posts already, partly my fault.
Tubes/Valves area.

It mentions Gibbs.
Talks about "ringing" versus "ringing"
One is due to oscillations, another is due to digital filter delays and frequency response.
One is a Tiger, the other is a house cat (in that order).

You might find it interesting.
 
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