Speakerworkshop with external amp suggestion

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I recently started building the standard budget DIY measurement rig (i.e. Panasonic mic & pre-amp, Wallin Jig II and Speakerworkshop on a laptop) and cannot get more than .1V from the 'headphone' jack into an 8-ohm load. I assume the laptop soundcard amp is just not enough. Would the preferable option be to:

a) Use an existing receiver and the line-out from the laptop for external amplification

or

b) Build a gainclone or similar chip-amp for dedicated purposes.

I would prefer not to have to take one of my receivers into double duty, but am concerned about some of the possible issues with a gainclone, specifically oscillation and 'discomfort' with low impedance loads. As it is to be used for speaker testing, I would suspect it would see some low loads from time to time.

Any suggestions from someone with experience with this would be appreciated.

Sandy.
 
I have been using a non inverting OPA549 GC for about 7 or 8 months for small signal driver testing, with no problems at all. It runs off a little 15-0-15 30VA trannie and is perfect for the job. I used a Sfernice 5% pot for the input to give reasonable accuracy, and it's a great little tool.
 
Sandy you could build a small GC fairly cheap especially if you have a parts stash...or you could just get a used amp really cheap...it all depends on the time you want to invest in this....heck when I built my signal generator years ago before software was available I included a small LM386 amp and speaker to hear what the frequency sounded like..haha


DIRT®
 
Hello Sandy,
I've built a non-inverting gainclone for use with SW and it works great. Using the software becomes much easier when the jig consists of a power-amp, mic pre-amp, PSU and all signal switching built into one box!

Be aware that most gainclone-type chip amplifiers have a minimum gain of 10 - this means that the measured signal could be ten times the amplitude of the reference signal. I simply used a divide by ten attenuator on the input to the power amp to keep the signals of similar amplitude.

There are schematics, pics and a rough build description on my website but it's not linked from the main page. Someone wanted to see schematics before the article was finished so I just dumped it up there. I'll find the URL if anyone is interested.

Nice one,
David.
 
Thanks!

Sounds like the GC should be a good solution. I'll double check the National datasheet and probably build a very standard version.

In hindsight, I would have done better by building everything in one box, but I already completed the mic-pre and the jig. Another project for later. . .

Thanks for the help!

Sandy.
 
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