In have the SP50 MP3/CD player from RioVolt (SonicBlue) and the sound is absolutely terrible out of it, which makes my $100 headphones sound like a $5 pair from Best Buy! So, I decided that I want to build a headphone amp for it. I found the LM4881N from National Semiconductor. It is a 200mW x 2 Boomer series headphone amp. Has anybody used one of these? Does it work well? Also, what is a good value for the resistors and caps for decent gain and no high-pass filter? I am going to run it from a 9Volt battery ran through a 7805 5V regulator.
Thanks, Mike
Thanks, Mike
For the absolute best-on-the-net tutorial on DIY headphone amps there is, go to:
http://www.tangentsoft.net/audio/
If you have never built a DIY amp before, his CMoy (originally designed by Chu Moy at www.headwize.com ) amp tutorial will start you from page one, and give you a very nice headphone amp for ~$50 all out, and ~$25 if you are skimping. RatShack protoboard, Digikey hand-matched parts and a BurrBrown 2132 opamp makes a very nice little amp. You can fit it in an Altoids tin, or get fancy with a different enclosure.
His (and others - it is a group effort) high-end PPA amp project, for which he sells a PCB and also has loads of detailed instructions, will run you ~$150 - $200 in parts and will rival any solid state amp on the market.
There is a very strong DIY community at www.head-fi.org , also. Tangent is among many people who hang there and will be happy to answer any questions.
GnD
http://www.tangentsoft.net/audio/
If you have never built a DIY amp before, his CMoy (originally designed by Chu Moy at www.headwize.com ) amp tutorial will start you from page one, and give you a very nice headphone amp for ~$50 all out, and ~$25 if you are skimping. RatShack protoboard, Digikey hand-matched parts and a BurrBrown 2132 opamp makes a very nice little amp. You can fit it in an Altoids tin, or get fancy with a different enclosure.
His (and others - it is a group effort) high-end PPA amp project, for which he sells a PCB and also has loads of detailed instructions, will run you ~$150 - $200 in parts and will rival any solid state amp on the market.
There is a very strong DIY community at www.head-fi.org , also. Tangent is among many people who hang there and will be happy to answer any questions.
GnD
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