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Re: Weird results DC operating point for Tube amplifier

 

On Thu, Feb 20, 2025 at 12:17 PM, Jerry Lee Marcel wrote:

BTW, source-follower it is not. It's actually a common-source stage.
A source fiollower has about unity gain, this common-source has about 15dB gain.

No, it is a source follower.? Its voltage gain is unity.? Input applied to gate, output from source pin.? Almost the same output voltage, but shifted 4.2 V lower.
?
The overall circuit has voltage gain (~23 dB), but all of that comes from the 12AU7, in its common-cathode configuration.
?
I wonder why you saw only 15 dB gain, and why you saw that in just the MOSFET.
?
Not that the following has any significance - but I vaguely recall reading about operating valves (vacuum tubes) at much lower than "normal" anode voltages.? ?There were specialized miniature valves designed for it.? But it was also applied to more traditional valves too, ones like the 12AU7 that are capable of hundreds of volts.? It does not appear to be a sure-fire way to generate distortion, as this simulation demonstrates, if you trust the SPICE models.? I can't recall what were the advantages (if any) of using such low voltages - other than easier battery power.? Lower noise?? ?Longer life?? I dunno.
?
Andy
?


Re: Interpreting Noise Simulation Results

 

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Yes, an RC high pass filter on the input will increase the noise. Although the capacitor doesn't itself add any noise, it causes the effective input noise voltage to increase, because:

Vn(tot) = √(En^2 + (In/2/pi/Cser)^2)

..where: En = I/P noise voltage density, and In = I/P noise current density (neglecting the source resistance noise, which often you can't do)

Remember also: "No attenuation before gain".

I should also mention (without seeing your schematic), that many of the devices in the LTspice standard libraries don't have realistic noise parameters, especially when it comes to 1/f noise.

--
Regards,
Tony


On 20/02/2025 20:17, manauo via groups.io wrote:

I don't have much experience using LTSPICE for noise simulations, and I'm having trouble understanding some of the results I'm getting. I'm investigating an amplifier circuit (file "Amplifier Noise" uploaded to files/Temp).
?
The amplifier is a cascode differential pair, signal frequency is 1MHz. Currently the circuit has no filtering besides the inherent roll-off at high frequency. I'm investigating whether adding AC coupling capacitors to the input to filter low-frequency noise can improve the performance. The inductance/resistance in series with each input represents the output impedance of the previous stage.
?
When I simulate the original circuit with no coupling capacitors, the result seems reasonable - relatively flat, input noise is a fraction of the output noise. However when I simulate the proposed circuit with coupling capacitors I don't understand the result.
?
The input noise balloons at low frequencies - the frequency range that the HPF of the capacitor is supposed to reduce, is now much greater. The output noise is lower in terms of total integrated noise, but still has an increased magnitude at low frequency compared to the original.
?
The decrease in total output noise is coming from a decrease in the high frequency noise, which makes sense because the inductance of the source impedance and the base pull-down resistor form an RL LPF. But the capacitor does not seem to be reducing LF noise, even though an AC sweep shows the expected HPF behavior.
?
Am I misinterpreting the results somehow? How is adding a high-pass filter at the input increasing noise at the low frequencies that it is supposed to be attenuating? What am I missing about noise simulations?


Re: PWM Timing Causing Shoot-thru

 

You need to find a strategy to enforce some amount of deadtime between the signals. Tuning is not going to do the job unless it is predictable and repeatable, Analog methods tend to be unreliable.
?
BRUCE108


PWM Timing Causing Shoot-thru

 

I am having some trouble getting the timing right on my PWM drive signals. What tells me my timing is wrong is the fact that I am seeing what appears to be shoot-through periodically.
?
?
Additionally, probing the gates of the FETs shows that there is somehow overlap in the HI and LO drive signals, despite my attempts to tune the voltage sources I am using to generate the PWM signals.
?
Any help is appreciated; I am not sure if the shoot-through is an artifact of LTSpice or if I am simply wrong with how I have set the PWMs up.
?
Thanks,
-May


Re: Interpreting Noise Simulation Results

 

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At low frequencies, the capacitor's impedance is quite high. the noise current generated by the active stages circulates in this increased impedance, resulting in an increasing voltage.

Le 20/02/2025 à 20:17, manauo via groups.io a écrit?:

Hello,
?
I don't have much experience using LTSPICE for noise simulations, and I'm having trouble understanding some of the results I'm getting. I'm investigating an amplifier circuit (file "Amplifier Noise" uploaded to files/Temp).
?
The amplifier is a cascode differential pair, signal frequency is 1MHz. Currently the circuit has no filtering besides the inherent roll-off at high frequency. I'm investigating whether adding AC coupling capacitors to the input to filter low-frequency noise can improve the performance. The inductance/resistance in series with each input represents the output impedance of the previous stage.
?
When I simulate the original circuit with no coupling capacitors, the result seems reasonable - relatively flat, input noise is a fraction of the output noise. However when I simulate the proposed circuit with coupling capacitors I don't understand the result.
?
The input noise balloons at low frequencies - the frequency range that the HPF of the capacitor is supposed to reduce, is now much greater. The output noise is lower in terms of total integrated noise, but still has an increased magnitude at low frequency compared to the original.
?
The decrease in total output noise is coming from a decrease in the high frequency noise, which makes sense because the inductance of the source impedance and the base pull-down resistor form an RL LPF. But the capacitor does not seem to be reducing LF noise, even though an AC sweep shows the expected HPF behavior.
?
Am I misinterpreting the results somehow? How is adding a high-pass filter at the input increasing noise at the low frequencies that it is supposed to be attenuating? What am I missing about noise simulations?


Re: Weird results DC operating point for Tube amplifier

 

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That is not the subject.

The subject is that they try to justify their quirky "design" with objective arguments.

Enough said now.

Le 20/02/2025 à 19:45, John Woodgate a écrit?:

RE; Yes, what? You asked, 'Or can they?', and the answer is, 'Yes, easily'. Well, of course Bravo wouldn't give figures that showed less than excellent performance. The THD with 33 ohm load is admitted to be rather high, and we don't know what the output voltage or power was at that THD. That is why I gave the two pairs of amplifier figures as an example.

On 2025-02-20 18:14, Jerry Lee Marcel via groups.io wrote:


Le 20/02/2025 à 17:33, John Woodgate a écrit?:

Yes, easily.

Yes what?

Consider, for example, these two amplifiers:

a) Output power 30 W, THD 0.1%

b) Output power 35 W, THD 5.2%

Which would you buy?

I don't care, but Bravo Audio seems to care about figures that are long accepted as performance indicators.

They are the same amplifier. Similar games are played with signal-to-noise ratio and frequency response.

On 2025-02-20 16:05, Jerry Lee Marcel via groups.io wrote:

Still they are publishing specifications that pertain to typical audio performance, such as frequency response and THD. They can't combine both quirkiness and normality.
Or can they?
Typical "I designed it that way because I could".
IMO it justifies disdain.

Le 20/02/2025 à 16:55, John Woodgate a écrit?:

I suspect that the weirdness is intentional. Weird designs have existed from? the earliest day of DIY radio receivers, before 'electronics'? was in the dictionary. I recall a report of a circuit that had the 2 V lead-acid cell apparently in series with the antenna circuit. Objective performance measurements are typically not to be applied to such designs. DO a web search for 'Bravo Audio reviews'.

On 2025-02-20 15:36, Jerry Lee Marcel via groups.io wrote:


Le 20/02/2025 à 15:27, Carlo a écrit?:
On Thu, Feb 20, 2025 at 05:40 AM, Andy I wrote:
There is some feedback from the audio signal into the heater voltage. Was that intentional?? Or just an undesirable side-effect?? I don't expect it would have very much effect on the heater's temperature (and from there to the triode's characteristics), but it looks undesirable to me. Should there be filtering?
Sorry, are you asking whether the audio signal feedback into the heater voltage comes from a design intentional choice ? Actually I don't know since I took it from the schematic of a commercial audio amplifier (Bravo Ocean).
It's extremely unlikely.
Heater temperature varies extremely slowly compared to audio signals.
It could result in distortion at very very low frequencies, definitely out of the audio band.
Now this design is weird from the start. Choosing to power a tube circuit from 24VDC is a major flaw, unless the goal is to create distortion.
--
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Virus-free.
--
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--
OOO - Own Opinions only If something is true: * as far as we know - it's science *for certain - it's mathematics *unquestionably - it's religion


Interpreting Noise Simulation Results

 

Hello,
?
I don't have much experience using LTSPICE for noise simulations, and I'm having trouble understanding some of the results I'm getting. I'm investigating an amplifier circuit (file "Amplifier Noise" uploaded to files/Temp).
?
The amplifier is a cascode differential pair, signal frequency is 1MHz. Currently the circuit has no filtering besides the inherent roll-off at high frequency. I'm investigating whether adding AC coupling capacitors to the input to filter low-frequency noise can improve the performance. The inductance/resistance in series with each input represents the output impedance of the previous stage.
?
When I simulate the original circuit with no coupling capacitors, the result seems reasonable - relatively flat, input noise is a fraction of the output noise. However when I simulate the proposed circuit with coupling capacitors I don't understand the result.
?
The input noise balloons at low frequencies - the frequency range that the HPF of the capacitor is supposed to reduce, is now much greater. The output noise is lower in terms of total integrated noise, but still has an increased magnitude at low frequency compared to the original.
?
The decrease in total output noise is coming from a decrease in the high frequency noise, which makes sense because the inductance of the source impedance and the base pull-down resistor form an RL LPF. But the capacitor does not seem to be reducing LF noise, even though an AC sweep shows the expected HPF behavior.
?
Am I misinterpreting the results somehow? How is adding a high-pass filter at the input increasing noise at the low frequencies that it is supposed to be attenuating? What am I missing about noise simulations?


Re: 3 Phase Voltage Sense model

 

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Thanks, Larry. I can't look at it at the moment, but I'll try later.

On 2025-02-20 19:10, larry.gunseor@... wrote:
John,
?
zip file now has the LMV324.asy and LMV324.cir files.
?
Larry
--
OOO - Own Opinions only If something is true: * as far as we know - it's science *for certain - it's mathematics *unquestionably - it's religion

Virus-free.


Re: 3 Phase Voltage Sense model

 

John,
?
zip file now has the LMV324.asy and LMV324.cir files.
?
Larry


Re: 3 Phase Voltage Sense model

 

John,
?
Will update zip file and include the LMV324 symbol and the LMV324.cir.? Should be up there in about 5 minutes.
?
Larry


Re: 3 Phase Voltage Sense model

 

Andy,
?
Updated zip file so now the symbol in 3Phase_Voltage_Sense_Test.asc is calling 3Phase_Vsense.sub
?
Larry


Re: Weird results DC operating point for Tube amplifier

 

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RE; Yes, what? You asked, 'Or can they?', and the answer is, 'Yes, easily'. Well, of course Bravo wouldn't give figures that showed less than excellent performance. The THD with 33 ohm load is admitted to be rather high, and we don't know what the output voltage or power was at that THD. That is why I gave the two pairs of amplifier figures as an example.

On 2025-02-20 18:14, Jerry Lee Marcel via groups.io wrote:


Le 20/02/2025 à 17:33, John Woodgate a écrit?:

Yes, easily.

Yes what?

Consider, for example, these two amplifiers:

a) Output power 30 W, THD 0.1%

b) Output power 35 W, THD 5.2%

Which would you buy?

I don't care, but Bravo Audio seems to care about figures that are long accepted as performance indicators.

They are the same amplifier. Similar games are played with signal-to-noise ratio and frequency response.

On 2025-02-20 16:05, Jerry Lee Marcel via groups.io wrote:

Still they are publishing specifications that pertain to typical audio performance, such as frequency response and THD. They can't combine both quirkiness and normality.
Or can they?
Typical "I designed it that way because I could".
IMO it justifies disdain.

Le 20/02/2025 à 16:55, John Woodgate a écrit?:

I suspect that the weirdness is intentional. Weird designs have existed from? the earliest day of DIY radio receivers, before 'electronics'? was in the dictionary. I recall a report of a circuit that had the 2 V lead-acid cell apparently in series with the antenna circuit. Objective performance measurements are typically not to be applied to such designs. DO a web search for 'Bravo Audio reviews'.

On 2025-02-20 15:36, Jerry Lee Marcel via groups.io wrote:


Le 20/02/2025 à 15:27, Carlo a écrit?:
On Thu, Feb 20, 2025 at 05:40 AM, Andy I wrote:
There is some feedback from the audio signal into the heater voltage. Was that intentional?? Or just an undesirable side-effect?? I don't expect it would have very much effect on the heater's temperature (and from there to the triode's characteristics), but it looks undesirable to me. Should there be filtering?
Sorry, are you asking whether the audio signal feedback into the heater voltage comes from a design intentional choice ? Actually I don't know since I took it from the schematic of a commercial audio amplifier (Bravo Ocean).
It's extremely unlikely.
Heater temperature varies extremely slowly compared to audio signals.
It could result in distortion at very very low frequencies, definitely out of the audio band.
Now this design is weird from the start. Choosing to power a tube circuit from 24VDC is a major flaw, unless the goal is to create distortion.
--
OOO - Own Opinions only If something is true: * as far as we know - it's science *for certain - it's mathematics *unquestionably - it's religion

Virus-free.
--
OOO - Own Opinions only If something is true: * as far as we know - it's science *for certain - it's mathematics *unquestionably - it's religion
--
OOO - Own Opinions only If something is true: * as far as we know - it's science *for certain - it's mathematics *unquestionably - it's religion


Re: 3 Phase Voltage Sense model

 

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ALL the .ASCs report 'Can't find model LMV324', and there is no symbol in the schematic, just a blank space. The readme.txt file doesn't mention the LMV324. I've just now downloaded the ZIP and checked again. Same error message.

On 2025-02-20 18:03, larry.gunseor@... wrote:
John,
?
Do you need to include LMV324 symbol and model, isn't that taken care of when you generate the net list?? As mentioned in the readme.txt file the 3Phase_Voltage_Sense_Circuit.asc has the LMV324 and it simulates properly.? The goal was to create a model of the circuit and then use that model with input voltages (3Phase_Voltage_Sense_Test.asc).
?
Larry
--
OOO - Own Opinions only If something is true: * as far as we know - it's science *for certain - it's mathematics *unquestionably - it's religion

Virus-free.


Re: Weird results DC operating point for Tube amplifier

 

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Le 20/02/2025 à 18:31, John Woodgate a écrit?:

There really isn't any point in criticizing the design.

Maybe there is. The OP is probably on a wild goose chase.

It's deliberately weird. An LM386 makes a good headphone amplifier, but it might be difficult to sell for $130.

On 2025-02-20 17:17, Jerry Lee Marcel via groups.io wrote:

Yes, it's a circuit that works, somehow. However there are many more efficient and stable ways to bias a MOSFET and to provide voltage to a 6V heater from a 24V source.

BTW, source-follower it is not. It's actually a common-source stage.
A source fiollower has about unity gain, this common-source has about 15dB gain.

Le 20/02/2025 à 17:00, Carlo a écrit?:
On Thu, Feb 20, 2025 at 07:36 AM, Jerry Lee Marcel wrote:
Now this design is weird from the start. Choosing to power a tube circuit from 24VDC is a major flaw, unless the goal is to create distortion.
I'm not an expert. However I believe the LM317 in "current source" configuration actually fulfills two functions. First it is employed to bias the source of the IRF510 mosfet in common drain (aka source follower) configuration. Second such a constant current is employed to drive the 12AU7 triode heater.
--
OOO - Own Opinions only If something is true: * as far as we know - it's science *for certain - it's mathematics *unquestionably - it's religion

Virus-free.


Re: Weird results DC operating point for Tube amplifier

 

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Le 20/02/2025 à 17:33, John Woodgate a écrit?:

Yes, easily.

Yes what?

Consider, for example, these two amplifiers:

a) Output power 30 W, THD 0.1%

b) Output power 35 W, THD 5.2%

Which would you buy?

I don't care, but Bravo Audio seems to care about figures that are long accepted as performance indicators.

They are the same amplifier. Similar games are played with signal-to-noise ratio and frequency response.

On 2025-02-20 16:05, Jerry Lee Marcel via groups.io wrote:

Still they are publishing specifications that pertain to typical audio performance, such as frequency response and THD. They can't combine both quirkiness and normality.
Or can they?
Typical "I designed it that way because I could".
IMO it justifies disdain.

Le 20/02/2025 à 16:55, John Woodgate a écrit?:

I suspect that the weirdness is intentional. Weird designs have existed from? the earliest day of DIY radio receivers, before 'electronics'? was in the dictionary. I recall a report of a circuit that had the 2 V lead-acid cell apparently in series with the antenna circuit. Objective performance measurements are typically not to be applied to such designs. DO a web search for 'Bravo Audio reviews'.

On 2025-02-20 15:36, Jerry Lee Marcel via groups.io wrote:


Le 20/02/2025 à 15:27, Carlo a écrit?:
On Thu, Feb 20, 2025 at 05:40 AM, Andy I wrote:
There is some feedback from the audio signal into the heater voltage. Was that intentional?? Or just an undesirable side-effect?? I don't expect it would have very much effect on the heater's temperature (and from there to the triode's characteristics), but it looks undesirable to me. Should there be filtering?
Sorry, are you asking whether the audio signal feedback into the heater voltage comes from a design intentional choice ? Actually I don't know since I took it from the schematic of a commercial audio amplifier (Bravo Ocean).
It's extremely unlikely.
Heater temperature varies extremely slowly compared to audio signals.
It could result in distortion at very very low frequencies, definitely out of the audio band.
Now this design is weird from the start. Choosing to power a tube circuit from 24VDC is a major flaw, unless the goal is to create distortion.
--
OOO - Own Opinions only If something is true: * as far as we know - it's science *for certain - it's mathematics *unquestionably - it's religion

Virus-free.
--
OOO - Own Opinions only If something is true: * as far as we know - it's science *for certain - it's mathematics *unquestionably - it's religion


Re: 3 Phase Voltage Sense model

 

John,
?
Do you need to include LMV324 symbol and model, isn't that taken care of when you generate the net list?? As mentioned in the readme.txt file the 3Phase_Voltage_Sense_Circuit.asc has the LMV324 and it simulates properly.? The goal was to create a model of the circuit and then use that model with input voltages (3Phase_Voltage_Sense_Test.asc).
?
Larry


Re: 3 Phase Voltage Sense model

 

Already did that and the outputs still are not correct
?


Re: 3 Phase Voltage Sense model

 

Andy,
?
The 3Phase_Voltage_Sense_Circuit.asc was the original schematic that simulates properly.
?
Modified that schematic to create 3Phase_Voltage_Sense_Model.asc, which I used to create the netlist and the symbol
?
Took the netlist and created 3Phase_Vsense.sub
?
The symbol 3Phase_Voltage_Sense.asy calls the Vsense.sub
?
The 3Phase_Voltage_Sense_Test uses the 3Phase_Voltage_Sense.asy along with 3 phase input voltages.? This is the one that does not simulate properly
?
?


Re: 3 Phase Voltage Sense model

 

Hello
Connect a ground to neutral in ....test.asc
?


Re: Weird results DC operating point for Tube amplifier

 

开云体育

No more difficult than 1m of coax and 2 gold-plated phono plugs. People still buy them because they hear something on that Alice Cooper LP they didn't hear before. It's probably tinnitus, but don't tell them.

--
Regards,
Tony


On 20/02/2025 18:31, John Woodgate wrote:

An LM386 makes a good headphone amplifier, but it might be difficult to sell for $130.