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Summer 2008
World Premiere! Difficulty Level
Side A I suppose if I had to floor the accelerator to drive 55 mph, maybe I'd think the life was being sucked out of my driving. Then again, maybe I like 55. Nice and safe, good gas mileage... Is impedance matching an issue? Passive volume controls do have to make a trade-off between input impedance and output impedance. If the input impedance is high, making the input to the volume control easy for the source to drive, then the output impedance is also high, possibly creating difficulty with the input impedance of the power amplifier. And vice versa: If your amplifier prefers low source impedance, then your signal source might have to look at low impedance in the volume control. This suggests the possibility of using a high quality buffer in conjunction with a volume control. A buffer is still an active circuit using tubes or transistors, but it has no voltage gain - it only interposes itself to make a low impedance into a high impedance, or vice versa. If you put a buffer in front of a volume control, the control's low impedance looks like high impedance. If you put a buffer after a volume control, it makes the output impedance much lower. You can put buffers before and after a volume control if you want. The thing here is to try to make a buffer that is very neutral. Given the simple task, it's pretty easy to construct simple buffers with very low distortion and noise and very wide bandwidth, all without negative feedback. There are lots of different possibilities for buffers, but we are going to pick my favorite:
Side B
For a fact this circuit can be easily constructed with perf-board and point-to-point wiring. I know, however, that many people won't start a project like this without a circuit board. The Gerber artwork is posted at www.passdiy.com and I have arranged to have finished PC boards available at cost around the time you read this.
Side C
R102 and R202 are there to prevent parasitic oscillation with the very wide bandwidth JFETs. C100 and C200 are there because the Gate of the JFETs needs to be set at half the DC voltage of the power supply - a voltage delivered to the buffer inputs by R2, R3, and C2 through R103 or R203. D1 performs the service of drawing down this DC voltage with the power supply when the power is turned off, otherwise C2 may hold a charge for a long enough time to give you a turn-on thump when powered back on. By the way, the time constant of R2, R3, and C2 are long enough that it takes a minute or two for the circuit to reach normal operating values, so don't get excited if there's no sound for a few seconds when you turn it on. R1 and C1 filter noise coming from the external supply. Q100 and Q200 are JFETs operated as follower transistors. The Source pins of these transistors follow the voltage at the Gates. The input impedance of the Gate is exceedingly high - many millions of ohms, and the output impedance at the Source pin is about 50 ohms. Q101 and Q201 are constant current sources formed by simply attaching the Gate pins of the JFETs to the Drain pins. They provide without loading them down or creating significant distortion. The best performance generally comes from matching the Idss of Q100 and Q101, and also Q200 and Q201. The Idss is simply the current that flows through the JFET when the Gate and Source are grounded and +10 volts or so is applied to the Drain. Often when you buy JFETs you can get them in Idss grades. I use GR or BL grades for this project. The Source DC voltage of the JFETs Q100 and Q200 is about the same as the Gate DC voltage (1/2 the supply voltage), and the output from the Source needs to have the DC voltage removed by C101 or C201, leaving the AC output signal, which passes through another safety resistor R104 or R204. Resistors R100, R200, R105, R205 are there to prevent the various potential thumps from switching inputs and turn-on transients.
Side D
Side E
There's just enough gain. If you were using any other power amp, you'd get 8 to 18 dB more gain, and would be able to break your lease or the speaker, or both. Do I feel like the pedal's to the metal and I'm only doing 55? No, as I'm listening as loud as I want and sleep soundly at night, knowing that I'm not throwing away signal with my volume control.
Side F
NOTE: You can see Dick Olsher's review of this unit by clicking here.
Manufacturer Price: $1000 assembled, kit version price not quite set at this time.
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