Do you think that this capacitor will generate noise? I must put electrolitic?
Transformers were used in old vacuum tube amplifiers, not in modern high power amplifiers used in cars. A modern high power car amplifier uses a voltage stepup circuit so the resulting 56VDC powers a 100W amplifier. Bridging two amplifiers is also used with or without a voltage stepup circuit. I had a car that used bridged amplifiers driving 2 ohm speakers to 26W when the supply was 13.2V.Yes But I use a source of 12 [V] not one of 90 [V]. For that reason I use the transformers, to get more power. Because I'm looking an output between 80 to 100 Watts.
I do not know which capacitor you are talking about.Do you think that this capacitor will generate noise? I must put electrolitic?
Your little output transistors have a fairly low maximum allowed current of only 6A. Your simple circuit is missing driver transistors so maybe the output transistors cannot supply peaks of 6A.What I simulated the circuit in multisim and no cut in the signal. It's weird because the greater the number of turns in the transformer secondary winding is less the reflected resistance and should be more power but decreases.
The datasheet for the TDA7293 says its MINIMUM supply is 24V but you have only 12V. Their parallel amplifier circuit is used to drive a very low load impedance (many speakers in parallel) that you do not have.Regarding the parallel setup, viewing the schematic attached to the TDA7293 datasheet, I see the parallel configuration I did okay. Am I right?
It is two amplifiers in a bridge. One amplifier drives one wire of a speaker and the other amplifier drives the other wire of the speaker with reversed phase. Then the voltage and current swings in the speaker are almost doubled resulting in about 3.5 times the power of a single amplifier driving the speaker. Also since you have a single supply voltage a single amplifier needs an output capacitor that cuts low frequencies and cuts output power, but a bridged amplifier does not need an output capacitor.Just two things. I do not know what a full H-bridge it is.
1000uF is too small for deep bass into 4 ohms. 40Hz will be at half power. Lower frequencies will have less power.And if I do not put the capacitor of 1 mF there is a component cc in the load. What can i do? because I can't get it away.
Just two things. I do not know what a full H-bridge it is. And if I do not put the capacitor of 1 mF there is a component cc in the load. What can i do? because I can't get it away.
What is "another steps"? Use a 1:3 transformer?Can I put another steps equal to the attached in parallel to obtain twice the power would be 100W?
Check what I did. I get a power of 41 W. It's okay?
Do I need the Re resistor of 0.1 Ω? because without it I get a power or 54 Wat.
Can I put another steps equal to the attached in parallel to obtain twice the power would be 100W?
The 0.1 ohm emitter resistors allow NPN and PNP transistors with different spec's to operate more equally. The resistors add negative feedback that reduces distortion.
The diodes should be mounted on the heatsink of the output transistors for thermal stability. Then when the output transistors heat and conduct more current which causes them to heat more and conduct more current .... (thermal runaway) they also heat the diodes which reduces their forward voltage which reduces the base-emitter voltage of the transistors which reduces their current increase to almost nothing.I always thought the emitter resistors are for compensating thermal drifts and thus stabilize operating area. But this also improves distortion.
Did you adjust values in order to get all you can out of your present circuit?
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