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why my power amplifier cannot amplify?huhu..

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please troubleshoot my circuit and o/put waveform..

 

Fortunately Q4 has wrong polarity, otherwise Q1+Q2, possibly Q3 + Q4 would burn. The second stage can be
considered a suitable common emitter circuit, if you connect the output to Rc.
 

@FvM

Q4 wrong polarity..?so,my output of 1st stage must be connected to RC?
 

I don't know, where the output of 1st stage "must be connected" because I don't understand the circuit. I can't relate it
to a known amplifier principle circuit.

Wrong polarity means, that Q4 is not operating in active transistor mode. Check the polarity arrows.
 

Q4 looks like it 'should' be a compound PNP but the emitter and collector are reversed. However, I think you need to explain the rationalle behind the circuit. What are you trying to achieve? It seems a bit random.

Keith
 

    marinara27

    Points: 2
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I found, that the above circuits is simply reproducing the errors of a circuit previously posted by abbeyromy in the same thread.
If Q4 collector and emitter are exchanged, than it's working in principle.

As keith pointed out for the two transistor complementary follower at the top of this thread, the bias voltage is again too low,
so the circuit creates crossover distortions. Three or four diodes should be used.

The purpose of the overall circuit seems dubious. One would expect the common emitter stage to be connected as a preamplifier and
the complementary follower as output stage. To achieve a gain > 1, the output stage must be connected to the collector of Q5.

P.S.: I think, the overall structure should look like this:

 

    marinara27

    Points: 2
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@keith @FvM

actually, i am trying to compare the circuit performance on different classes of power amplifier..
i have try worked on different classes of power amplifier..yup,the circuit quasi complementary is provided by abbey..

my problem is i have designed the power amplifier of class b and ab..but the output do not amplify..
i have post my schematic previously...
 

but the output do not amplify..
I don't see open question with the said circuits. It has been clarified, that the "follower" circuits have a voltage gain ≈ 1
(but a considerable current and power gain). A common emitter amplifier circuit as above can provide the voltage gain. Both
circuits have no particular problems, if implemented correctly (reasonable dimensioning, placing the transistors correctly,
connecting all circuit nodes).

As a not yet addressed topic, you may want to include the output stage in an overall feedback loop to reduce distortions.
You hardly won't find an audio amplifier without feedback in the output stage. But it's not required for basic operation, you can
think of it, if the basic circuits started working for you.
 

dear FvM..

i need to analyze the basic operation of power amplifier class B.. in your opinion..,can i just choose the class B part without combining the circuit with common emitter?
 

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