after reading through daz'a thread (any reason this wont work) i started to reconsider a control i was going to put into a circuit for the monster of a bass amp. i was going to put in a control to limit the bass. i was planning to either use a high pass RC network where i could control the f3 so i could adjust it from ~5hz to ~150hz. i was also going to do a low pass where i could adjust the f3 from ~20khz to 500hz or wherever. was also considering similar designs. i was going to use these along with a james style tone stack to get quite a versatile eq as long as you didnt want to boost the low lows without the low mids, or the inverse with the highs.
i understand that negative feedback is inserting an out of phase signal to a circuit, which essentially cancels the signal to a certain extent. negative feedback is described as tightening up the sound and making things more controlable.
other than attenuation, how does it make things sound "tighter and under control". it seems to me that it is more useful than just turning down the volume, or turning down the treble in the case of a presense control.
looking at what it does technically (cancelling out part of the waveform) doesnt seem to me as anything more than attenuation, but it is very important to hifi systems to make the amp linear from what i've heard. this seems more than just attenuation.
i'd like to understand a bit more about how negative feedback works so i can possibly use it as low cut or high cut either around a gain stage or from the output tap to the PI. on http://www.freewebs.com/valvewizard/localfeedback.html it seems that they use -ve feedback to greatly decrease gain (gain of 65 to 10 or less). i'm thinking i may use -ve feedback around a pentode stage (6bl8) through an inductor or possibly a RC filter to tighten up/minimise the lows. they seem to suggest that not minimising the gain alot can make the input impedance too high? this looked to me to be due to the grid resistor. would it be reasonable to go without the grid resistor and just use a resistor from the signal out to the grid (+ a filter in my case). i would replace the value of the grid resistor with the output impedance of the previous stage?
the other thing is a 6bl8 is not designed for being used as a gain stage, so the datasheets dont seem to help much in calculating it theoretically. i'm thinking i may use a low pass rc network in the feedback circuit and use a pot to adjust the f3. this way i can make the circuit without the feedback and measure the gain, and then tweak and test to suit.
thanks
luke
i understand that negative feedback is inserting an out of phase signal to a circuit, which essentially cancels the signal to a certain extent. negative feedback is described as tightening up the sound and making things more controlable.
other than attenuation, how does it make things sound "tighter and under control". it seems to me that it is more useful than just turning down the volume, or turning down the treble in the case of a presense control.
looking at what it does technically (cancelling out part of the waveform) doesnt seem to me as anything more than attenuation, but it is very important to hifi systems to make the amp linear from what i've heard. this seems more than just attenuation.
i'd like to understand a bit more about how negative feedback works so i can possibly use it as low cut or high cut either around a gain stage or from the output tap to the PI. on http://www.freewebs.com/valvewizard/localfeedback.html it seems that they use -ve feedback to greatly decrease gain (gain of 65 to 10 or less). i'm thinking i may use -ve feedback around a pentode stage (6bl8) through an inductor or possibly a RC filter to tighten up/minimise the lows. they seem to suggest that not minimising the gain alot can make the input impedance too high? this looked to me to be due to the grid resistor. would it be reasonable to go without the grid resistor and just use a resistor from the signal out to the grid (+ a filter in my case). i would replace the value of the grid resistor with the output impedance of the previous stage?
the other thing is a 6bl8 is not designed for being used as a gain stage, so the datasheets dont seem to help much in calculating it theoretically. i'm thinking i may use a low pass rc network in the feedback circuit and use a pot to adjust the f3. this way i can make the circuit without the feedback and measure the gain, and then tweak and test to suit.
thanks
luke
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