is 40 Vdc ok for bridged?

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Hi Guys, I just found another transformer that after rectification and with a 56000uF cap I get 40Vdc , I know these (lm3886) can handle the 42Vdc as its limit, would 40V be ok? I have a 2 of these amps bridged(not paralleled) so that I can get 100W output into a 8 ohm load. Datasheet says I should get 50W with +/- 35V. I presume 40v should be ok....what you guys think, would this be ok?
Thank you in advance.
 
Since you are bridging it, you are effectively halving the load seen by each chip - this is because the current is doubled, so you effectively do have a 4 Ohm load.

As bigparsnip said, you can bridge and parallel 4 chips to split the current in each back to what it would be for an 8 Ohm load, but I would suggest changing the power supply instead - a 2V headroom is little smaller than I would be comfortable with.

There is a good spreadsheet on the National website for this, it should give you a good idea of the limits of the devices (it's called "Overture Design Guide" or something like that).
 
Avenger,
that supply voltage is much too high for a bridged configuration, unless you were to use a 16 ohm load.

Please read the National Semiconductor application note on building high-power amplifiers using it's "Overture" (chip amp) products, which you can download here. They discuss bridged, parallel, and bridged-parallel designs, including how to determine the correct power supply voltage, which is a critical aspect of any amplifier design.
 
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