Germanium Amplifier
#151 Re: Germanium Amplifier
Just a couple of thought, you are never going to be able to use much in the way of negative feedback in that amp (at least by comparison with a modern direct coupled circuit. That interstage is going to add so much group delay and general phase shifting nastyness that the most you can manage is PP valve amp levels of feedback. But I wonder if its worth trying a NPN for Q1 and taking the feedback back to Q1's base.
The fact that you are getting problems with sharing the power supply is pointing to generally phase shifting issues. I am reminded of the joke about asking for directions in Ireland, and the answer being "If I was you, I wouldn't start from here".
The fact that you are getting problems with sharing the power supply is pointing to generally phase shifting issues. I am reminded of the joke about asking for directions in Ireland, and the answer being "If I was you, I wouldn't start from here".
Whenever an honest man discovers that he's mistaken, he will either cease to be mistaken or he will cease to be honest.
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#152 Re: Germanium Amplifier
And these are ex-RAF military ones, so even swankier.andrew Ivimey wrote: ↑Sat Mar 09, 2024 7:32 am PNP oc35s ( never heard of them) I always thought oc28s were the swanky ones!
I'd like to hear them.
"No matter how fast light travels it finds that the darkness has always got there first, and is waiting for it."
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#153 Re: Germanium Amplifier
Yes, yes, and yes. And yes. And .....Nick wrote: ↑Mon Mar 11, 2024 9:48 pm Just a couple of thought, you are never going to be able to use much in the way of negative feedback in that amp (at least by comparison with a modern direct coupled circuit. That interstage is going to add so much group delay and general phase shifting nastyness that the most you can manage is PP valve amp levels of feedback. But I wonder if its worth trying a NPN for Q1 and taking the feedback back to Q1's base.
The fact that you are getting problems with sharing the power supply is pointing to generally phase shifting issues. I am reminded of the joke about asking for directions in Ireland, and the answer being "If I was you, I wouldn't start from here".
It's another one of those out of a library book in the 1970's. "most you can manage is PP valve amp levels of feedback", I came to the same conclusion, hence reducing the gain. But I'd be satisfied with that, pending what it sounds like.
"I wonder if its worth trying a NPN for Q1 and taking the feedback back to Q1's base" - I tried converting to NPN, but couldn't make it work - it went very complicated very quickly...
Just for reference, it's pretty much based on this - the 'Burns Orbit', which was a guitar amp apparently - I think -
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"No matter how fast light travels it finds that the darkness has always got there first, and is waiting for it."
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#154 Re: Germanium Amplifier
As usual, the last few days I've been down a different rabbit hole...
"No matter how fast light travels it finds that the darkness has always got there first, and is waiting for it."
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#155 Re: Germanium Amplifier
Coolio! Think mine came from Langrex ... were in individual white carboard boxes, each stuck into polystyrene block, plus a mica insulator 'gasket', and official looking RAF type lettering and codes on the outside, including, 'Tested April 1977' stamps.Dave the bass wrote: ↑Mon Mar 11, 2024 8:46 pm I was part-paid (aka "take them please before I dump them on eBay") for a repair job a while back in a few OC35s! Matched pairs apparently back in the 60s or 70s and stored in these polystyrene boxes.
Shiny shiny!
"No matter how fast light travels it finds that the darkness has always got there first, and is waiting for it."
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#156 Re: Germanium Amplifier
Ah found a picture ...
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"No matter how fast light travels it finds that the darkness has always got there first, and is waiting for it."
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#157 Re: Germanium Amplifier
Oh wait, sorry I misunderstood - forgot where 'Q1' was - I know what you mean now - I shall have a ponder..... back shortly ...
"I have a cunning plan my lord"
The 'frontend' already existed as a stand-alone SE MOSFET amp - the same applied there - without any extra o/p stage added on.The fact that you are getting problems with sharing the power supply is pointing to generally phase shifting issues. I am reminded of the joke about asking for directions in Ireland, and the answer being "If I was you, I wouldn't start from here".
"No matter how fast light travels it finds that the darkness has always got there first, and is waiting for it."
#158 Re: Germanium Amplifier
What I love about that circuit is how much you can see valve thinking. Its basically a valve amp circuit with lower voltages and transistors.Just for reference, it's pretty much based on this - the 'Burns Orbit', which was a guitar amp apparently - I think -
Whenever an honest man discovers that he's mistaken, he will either cease to be mistaken or he will cease to be honest.
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#159 Re: Germanium Amplifier
Definitely got that going on hasn't it? This is a bit too new, let's go with what we know ...
"No matter how fast light travels it finds that the darkness has always got there first, and is waiting for it."
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#160 Re: Germanium Amplifier
Alright, so then I found this fabulous thing - it's another one from the school exercise book... this is Fig 10.38 from the original library book...
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They are taking the NFB back to the driver stage emitter, so I tried that... first I did what you suggested, take it back to base, that did the trick, but was a bit awkward to drive - not impossible, just awkward. So I went with this...
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It seems completely stable, such that all the extra paraphernalia that was added to try keep it under control, could be entirely removed! Can't be bad.
So now, the first stage makes do with local emitter feedback, with a bit of Voltage gain to bring the output V up to 9 - 10X the input V. Also it does DC biasing of the 2nd stage. Sweeet!
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They are taking the NFB back to the driver stage emitter, so I tried that... first I did what you suggested, take it back to base, that did the trick, but was a bit awkward to drive - not impossible, just awkward. So I went with this...
- -
It seems completely stable, such that all the extra paraphernalia that was added to try keep it under control, could be entirely removed! Can't be bad.
So now, the first stage makes do with local emitter feedback, with a bit of Voltage gain to bring the output V up to 9 - 10X the input V. Also it does DC biasing of the 2nd stage. Sweeet!
"No matter how fast light travels it finds that the darkness has always got there first, and is waiting for it."
- Mike H
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#161 Re: Germanium Amplifier
Frequency sweep, checks out OK...
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Noise plot, it is what it is...
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Clipping with 2V peak input. No unexpected behaviour...
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Noise plot, it is what it is...
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Clipping with 2V peak input. No unexpected behaviour...
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"No matter how fast light travels it finds that the darkness has always got there first, and is waiting for it."
- Mike H
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#162 Re: Germanium Amplifier
First 30 seconds of a WAV file - Life Is A Long Song by Jethro Tull.....
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I had the EP of this when it first came out, so 1971-ish, ad often used it as a 'test signal' for whatever I was building at the time.
Not an ideal choice to be honest, and caused a bit of head-scratching sometimes, until the penny finally dropped that, like a lot of Tull's stuff, the tonal balance can be quite weird, usually weak bass and a reedy sounding treble - leading one to chase a 'problem' in one's project that didn't actually exist - no, it really does sound like that...
Anyhow thought it would be amusing to simulate it, just for old time's sake
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I had the EP of this when it first came out, so 1971-ish, ad often used it as a 'test signal' for whatever I was building at the time.
Not an ideal choice to be honest, and caused a bit of head-scratching sometimes, until the penny finally dropped that, like a lot of Tull's stuff, the tonal balance can be quite weird, usually weak bass and a reedy sounding treble - leading one to chase a 'problem' in one's project that didn't actually exist - no, it really does sound like that...
Anyhow thought it would be amusing to simulate it, just for old time's sake
"No matter how fast light travels it finds that the darkness has always got there first, and is waiting for it."
- Mike H
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#163 Re: Germanium Amplifier
With improved output transistor biasing - originally thermistors were added for safety, they basically went across the transformer secondaries, because the DC resistances of same formed part of the resistor divider that biases each o/p transistor, as per the Burns-Orbit. The original thermistors are 100Ω, not ideal values, and not ideally placed, because if they go low resistance they will load the transformer. Hence, reworked to remove the secondaries from the bias chain, and so the low impedance end of it is a resistor and thermistor in parallel, 10Ω for each seems to be it.
Latest schematic -
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Step temperature plots, 20 - 60°C in 5° steps - top to bottom starting with green - this is the current thru either of the OC35 emitter resistors -
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Footnote - it didn't help the instability issues that the transformer is/was lightly loaded. Not shown on the schematic, but each secondary has 100Ω in parallel. This was also what the 100Ω thermistors did, but now they're removed. That seems to be the MO.
Onwards...
Latest schematic -
- -
Step temperature plots, 20 - 60°C in 5° steps - top to bottom starting with green - this is the current thru either of the OC35 emitter resistors -
_ -
Footnote - it didn't help the instability issues that the transformer is/was lightly loaded. Not shown on the schematic, but each secondary has 100Ω in parallel. This was also what the 100Ω thermistors did, but now they're removed. That seems to be the MO.
Onwards...
"No matter how fast light travels it finds that the darkness has always got there first, and is waiting for it."