ArticCynda
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Your attached schematic(?) does not work.
Thank you for your reaction!Your attached schematic(?) does not work.
Brian,T2 is simply an amplifer stage, it's T4 that controls
the current.
I know how you feel - it has been so cold recently I will have to start wearing gloves; my fingers have gone numb!Keith, you are quite right. Finger trouble at my end - or old age - or, most likely a bit of both!
Brian.
Now the questions:
- what is R6 for (I assume some sort of feedback)?
- what is C4 for?
- how does the second stage (T2) use the current source exactly?
... how to "calculate" this circuit? For example, how to find the DC emitter voltage of T1, or the base voltage of T4? An example would be awesome!
Simply calculate the reactance (AC resistance) of C2 at an audio frequency such as 1kHz. It is only 0.07 ohms and is less at higher frequencies. So when the output is shorted then the output transistors T3 and T4 will produce an extremely high current through C2 to the short when the amplifier is playing. T3 is the load for T2, it does not drive C2.Audioguru, doesn't the series capacitor C2 automatically protect the output against a short circuit? I would assume that since T3 is a fixed current source, it cannot be shorted.
Without negative feedback the voltage gain of T1 plus T2 is very high. The current sink made with T3 has a very high impedance which makes the gain of T2 very high. R6 and R5 form the negative feedback then the voltage gain of the entire circuit is R6/R5= 10.if I would replace the current source around T3 with a simple resistor, that my output volume increases with supply voltage? I'm at the moment trying to figure out how to calculate the AC amplification of the circuit.
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