Have you considered starting with building something from a kit, then building someone else's design from the schematic, then trying to design your own circuit?
Bret, get lost in the Elliott Sound Products site.... This is a good place to start Beginners' Guide to Electronics, Part 1 - Basic Components Explained
How is it possible to amplify the input signal, divide it and compare the original signal, when I assume the incoming signal has changed by the time this processing has taken place? Does this all happen instantaneously, or is there a record of the incoming signal held momentarily somewhere so that it can be compared after the processing has taken place?
Negative feedback does nothing to correct the incoming signal then, only corrects the amplified signal.
Negative feedback does nothing to correct the incoming signal then, only corrects the amplified signal.
Yes, as near as makes no difference, it's the same reason you don't fall off your bicycle 😉Does this all happen instantaneously
Indeed, it only corrects the amplified signal and it only works well when the input signal varies slowly compared to the speed of the amplifier (in jargon, has a bandwidth small compared to the loop bandwidth and a rate of change small compared to the slew rate limit). Fortunately, audio signals normally meet that condition. If you were to build a 10 GHz RF amplifier, it would be very difficult to make the circuit so fast that negative feedback gave any benefit at all.
It's hard to imagine things happening nearly simultaneously like that, but I will get used to it.
The signal travels very fast and doesn't have far to go, don't worry about it, seriously. Imagine two railway carriages with a very tight coupling between them............
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