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#1
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Here's something I'm hacking.
Unlike Jim I am scum. However, what is it and am I wasting my time? DNA |
#2
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![]() "Genome" wrote in message ... Here's something I'm hacking. Unlike Jim I am scum. However, what is it and am I wasting my time? DNA Ahhhhh...... DNA |
#3
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Genome a écrit :
Here's something I'm hacking. Unlike Jim I am scum. However, what is it and am I wasting my time? That's a multiplier, given that Ic(Q21) is your output. One pb I see is that you want to current drive your Q7-Q8 and the Q9-Q10 logging pairs as well as the Q11-Q12 diff pair tail, which is posing some pb for the collectors/bases nodes voltage that have to you fix through R16-R17-R6-R9. What I'd do is to set the Q7-Q8 and Q9-Q10 collectors voltage, which will in turn establish the Q11-Q12 and Q13-Q14 diff pairs base voltages. And also I'd directly bias Q21 with an emitter current source, instead of using the R12/R13=2 to bias it at 100uA which will run the diff pairs at different collector currents. -- Thanks, Fred. |
#4
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John Larkin wrote:
On Tue, 27 Mar 2007 12:50:03 GMT, "Genome" wrote: Here's something I'm hacking. Unlike Jim I am scum. However, what is it and am I wasting my time? DNA Since it has five inputs and no output, it doesn't do anything! John Kind of like Homer? -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
#5
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![]() "John Larkin" wrote in message ... On Tue, 27 Mar 2007 12:50:03 GMT, "Genome" wrote: Here's something I'm hacking. Unlike Jim I am scum. However, what is it and am I wasting my time? DNA Since it has five inputs and no output, it doesn't do anything! John Circuit thing in development..... It is meant to do something useful but if you are thick..... unsure about the application, then it is just a pretty picture. Fred is on the ball, but you'd expect that from an Eyetalien who knows about proper sport. The porty things with their pointy stuff sort of indicate inputs and outputs. The three on the left with their pointy stuff going into the circuit might be inputs from some other part of the circuit. The two on the right with their pointy things going out of the circuit might be outputs to some other part of the circuit...... I'm 15st 6lb and you must have a full head of hair. DNA |
#6
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![]() "Fred Bartoli" r_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Genome a écrit : Here's something I'm hacking. Unlike Jim I am scum. However, what is it and am I wasting my time? That's a multiplier, given that Ic(Q21) is your output. One pb I see is that you want to current drive your Q7-Q8 and the Q9-Q10 logging pairs as well as the Q11-Q12 diff pair tail, which is posing some pb for the collectors/bases nodes voltage that have to you fix through R16-R17-R6-R9. What I'd do is to set the Q7-Q8 and Q9-Q10 collectors voltage, which will in turn establish the Q11-Q12 and Q13-Q14 diff pairs base voltages. And also I'd directly bias Q21 with an emitter current source, instead of using the R12/R13=2 to bias it at 100uA which will run the diff pairs at different collector currents. -- Thanks, Fred. Yup! Part of it is.... Don't lose sleep though. I most definately don't really know what I am doing other than poking at stuff to find an answer. I am using the said resistors to set operating points... Hang on..... are you having a bash? DNA |
#7
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On Tue, 27 Mar 2007 12:50:03 GMT, "Genome"
wrote: Here's something I'm hacking. Unlike Jim I am scum. However, what is it and am I wasting my time? DNA Since it has five inputs and no output, it doesn't do anything! John |
#8
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On Tue, 27 Mar 2007 12:50:03 GMT, "Genome"
wrote: Here's something I'm hacking. Unlike Jim I am scum. However, what is it and am I wasting my time? DNA Lose the Q15, Q16, Q18 current mirrors and replace with diodes or resistors to set the common-mode operating range. ...Jim Thompson -- | James E.Thompson, P.E. | mens | | Analog Innovations, Inc. | et | | Analog/Mixed-Signal ASIC's and Discrete Systems | manus | | Phoenix, Arizona Voice ![]() | E-mail Address at Website Fax ![]() | http://www.analog-innovations.com | 1962 | America: Land of the Free, Because of the Brave |
#9
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Genome a écrit :
"Fred Bartoli" r_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Genome a écrit : Here's something I'm hacking. Unlike Jim I am scum. However, what is it and am I wasting my time? That's a multiplier, given that Ic(Q21) is your output. One pb I see is that you want to current drive your Q7-Q8 and the Q9-Q10 logging pairs as well as the Q11-Q12 diff pair tail, which is posing some pb for the collectors/bases nodes voltage that have to you fix through R16-R17-R6-R9. What I'd do is to set the Q7-Q8 and Q9-Q10 collectors voltage, which will in turn establish the Q11-Q12 and Q13-Q14 diff pairs base voltages. And also I'd directly bias Q21 with an emitter current source, instead of using the R12/R13=2 to bias it at 100uA which will run the diff pairs at different collector currents. -- Thanks, Fred. Yup! Part of it is.... Don't lose sleep though. I most definately don't really know what I am doing other than poking at stuff to find an answer. I am using the said resistors to set operating points... Hang on..... are you having a bash? Would you post the .asc file so that I don't have to redo it all? -- Thanks, Fred. |
#10
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![]() "Fred Bartoli" r_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Would you post the .asc file so that I don't have to redo it all? -- Thanks, Fred. Here you go..... I can't tell you what I am trying to do because Jim has just got out of bed in IC design mode (?). The last one might do what I am looking for but I have to crap about with things for longer to find out other stuff. Honest, don't waste too much time on it. I'm not going to pay (much) attention. DNA |
#11
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![]() "Jim Thompson" wrote in message ... On Tue, 27 Mar 2007 12:50:03 GMT, "Genome" wrote: Here's something I'm hacking. Unlike Jim I am scum. However, what is it and am I wasting my time? DNA Lose the Q15, Q16, Q18 current mirrors and replace with diodes or resistors to set the common-mode operating range. ...Jim Thompson Sir! Yes! Sir! Uhm..... ********, Q17 has become a Red Herring. DNA |
#12
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On Tue, 27 Mar 2007 16:34:16 GMT, "Genome"
wrote: "John Larkin" wrote in message .. . On Tue, 27 Mar 2007 12:50:03 GMT, "Genome" wrote: Here's something I'm hacking. Unlike Jim I am scum. However, what is it and am I wasting my time? DNA Since it has five inputs and no output, it doesn't do anything! John Circuit thing in development..... It is meant to do something useful but if you are thick..... unsure about the application, then it is just a pretty picture. Fred is on the ball, but you'd expect that from an Eyetalien who knows about proper sport. The porty things with their pointy stuff sort of indicate inputs and outputs. The three on the left with their pointy stuff going into the circuit might be inputs from some other part of the circuit. The two on the right with their pointy things going out of the circuit might be outputs to some other part of the circuit...... Forgive my ignorance; I see it now. The two on the right are fixed outputs, 7.5 and 15 volts DC. The three on the left are inputs that do nothing. So it's a power supply. Hey, with a little work, you could maybe turn this into one of those power factor thingies. I'm 15st 6lb and you must have a full head of hair. 155 lbs this morning, and roger the hair. John |
#13
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![]() "John Larkin" wrote in message ... On Tue, 27 Mar 2007 16:34:16 GMT, "Genome" wrote: "John Larkin" wrote in message . .. On Tue, 27 Mar 2007 12:50:03 GMT, "Genome" wrote: Here's something I'm hacking. Unlike Jim I am scum. However, what is it and am I wasting my time? DNA Since it has five inputs and no output, it doesn't do anything! John Circuit thing in development..... It is meant to do something useful but if you are thick..... unsure about the application, then it is just a pretty picture. Fred is on the ball, but you'd expect that from an Eyetalien who knows about proper sport. The porty things with their pointy stuff sort of indicate inputs and outputs. The three on the left with their pointy stuff going into the circuit might be inputs from some other part of the circuit. The two on the right with their pointy things going out of the circuit might be outputs to some other part of the circuit...... Forgive my ignorance; I see it now. The two on the right are fixed outputs, 7.5 and 15 volts DC. The three on the left are inputs that do nothing. So it's a power supply. Hey, with a little work, you could maybe turn this into one of those power factor thingies. I'm 15st 6lb and you must have a full head of hair. 155 lbs this morning, and roger the hair. John Well, there you go then. Short bloke. DNA |
#14
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![]() "Chris Jones" wrote in message ... Genome wrote: "Genome" wrote in message ... Here's something I'm hacking. Unlike Jim I am scum. However, what is it and am I wasting my time? DNA Ahhhhh...... DNA Would it matter if R12, Q17, R13, Q18, Q9, Q10, Q11, Q12, Q4, Q3, R5 and R4 were all omitted? Then you could connect the bases of Q13 and Q14 to the place where you used to connect the bases of Q11 and Q12 (but the proper way around), and nobody will be any the wiser. Of course I have not simulated it so I could be wrong. Chris Sounds good to me. I suppose I'll have to wake up in the morning and have a cup of tea before I delete the extraneous stuff. DNA |
#15
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Genome wrote:
"Genome" wrote in message ... Here's something I'm hacking. Unlike Jim I am scum. However, what is it and am I wasting my time? DNA Ahhhhh...... DNA Would it matter if R12, Q17, R13, Q18, Q9, Q10, Q11, Q12, Q4, Q3, R5 and R4 were all omitted? Then you could connect the bases of Q13 and Q14 to the place where you used to connect the bases of Q11 and Q12 (but the proper way around), and nobody will be any the wiser. Of course I have not simulated it so I could be wrong. Chris |
#16
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Genome a écrit :
"Fred Bartoli" r_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Would you post the .asc file so that I don't have to redo it all? -- Thanks, Fred. Here you go..... I can't tell you what I am trying to do because Jim has just got out of bed in IC design mode (?). The last one might do what I am looking for but I have to crap about with things for longer to find out other stuff. Honest, don't waste too much time on it. I'm not going to pay (much) attention. Here it is. As I don't know what you're trying to do (well I have a bit of idea, but since you don't want to tell :-) this is probably not ideal and you probably can simplify things a bit, but you get the idea. -- Thanks, Fred. Version 4 SHEET 1 1724 900 WIRE 144 -320 -208 -320 WIRE 1264 -320 560 -320 WIRE 1456 -320 1264 -320 WIRE -880 -352 -912 -352 WIRE 640 -352 -880 -352 WIRE 928 -288 736 -288 WIRE 1408 -288 1168 -288 WIRE 1456 -288 1408 -288 WIRE -752 -256 -752 -320 WIRE 144 -256 144 -320 WIRE 736 -256 736 -288 WIRE 928 -256 928 -288 WIRE -752 -144 -752 -176 WIRE 144 -144 144 -176 WIRE 736 -144 736 -176 WIRE 928 -144 928 -176 WIRE -608 -96 -688 -96 WIRE 80 -96 -608 -96 WIRE 832 -96 800 -96 WIRE 864 -96 832 -96 WIRE -752 -16 -912 -16 WIRE -752 -16 -752 -48 WIRE -608 -16 -608 -96 WIRE -608 -16 -752 -16 WIRE 736 -16 736 -48 WIRE 832 -16 832 -96 WIRE 832 -16 736 -16 WIRE -880 16 -880 -352 WIRE -752 16 -752 -16 WIRE -16 -48 -112 -48 WIRE -304 -48 -208 -48 WIRE 304 -320 208 -320 WIRE 464 -320 304 -320 WIRE 560 -320 464 -320 WIRE 928 96 928 -48 WIRE -16 -16 -16 -48 WIRE -304 -16 -304 -48 WIRE 304 -288 304 -320 WIRE 464 -288 464 -320 WIRE 1088 128 1088 96 WIRE -112 32 -112 -48 WIRE -80 32 -112 32 WIRE -208 32 -208 -48 WIRE -208 32 -240 32 WIRE 208 -240 208 -320 WIRE 240 -240 208 -240 WIRE 560 -240 560 -320 WIRE 560 -240 528 -240 WIRE 1264 592 1264 176 WIRE -880 128 -880 96 WIRE -752 128 -752 96 WIRE -752 128 -880 128 WIRE -880 160 -880 128 WIRE 464 144 464 -192 WIRE 1024 144 464 144 WIRE 304 176 304 -192 WIRE 608 176 304 176 WIRE 304 448 304 176 WIRE 464 448 464 144 WIRE 736 272 736 -16 WIRE 928 272 928 96 WIRE 608 320 608 176 WIRE 672 320 608 320 WIRE 1024 320 1024 144 WIRE 1024 320 992 320 WIRE 464 592 464 544 WIRE 736 400 736 368 WIRE 832 400 736 400 WIRE 928 400 928 368 WIRE 928 400 832 400 WIRE -880 432 -912 432 WIRE -816 432 -880 432 WIRE -704 432 -736 432 WIRE -608 432 -704 432 WIRE 240 416 144 416 WIRE 640 432 640 -352 WIRE 736 432 640 432 WIRE -704 464 -704 432 WIRE 144 448 144 416 WIRE 640 464 640 432 WIRE 832 464 832 400 WIRE -608 512 -608 432 WIRE -608 512 -640 512 WIRE -576 512 -608 512 WIRE 240 496 240 416 WIRE 240 496 208 496 WIRE 736 512 736 432 WIRE 736 512 704 512 WIRE 768 512 736 512 WIRE -880 592 -880 432 WIRE -704 592 -704 560 WIRE -512 592 -512 560 WIRE 144 592 144 544 WIRE 304 592 304 544 WIRE 640 592 640 560 WIRE 832 592 832 560 WIRE 1408 592 1408 -288 WIRE -880 704 -880 672 WIRE -704 704 -704 672 WIRE -704 704 -880 704 WIRE -512 704 -512 672 WIRE -512 704 -704 704 WIRE 144 704 144 672 WIRE 144 704 -16 704 WIRE 304 704 304 672 WIRE 304 704 144 704 WIRE 640 704 464 704 WIRE 640 704 640 672 WIRE 832 704 832 672 WIRE 832 704 640 704 WIRE 1088 704 832 704 WIRE 1088 704 1088 224 WIRE 1264 704 1264 672 WIRE 1264 704 1088 704 WIRE 1408 704 1408 672 WIRE 1408 704 1264 704 WIRE -880 736 -880 704 WIRE 464 704 464 672 WIRE 464 704 304 704 WIRE 144 -48 144 416 WIRE 208 -320 144 -320 WIRE -224 384 -224 352 WIRE -160 384 -224 384 WIRE -208 -48 -112 -48 WIRE -160 704 -304 704 WIRE -160 624 -160 384 WIRE -96 176 304 176 WIRE 464 144 -224 144 WIRE -224 144 -224 256 WIRE -304 304 -288 304 WIRE -304 80 -304 304 WIRE -96 256 -96 176 WIRE -16 80 -16 304 WIRE -16 304 -32 304 WIRE -208 -320 -304 -320 WIRE -304 -288 -304 -320 WIRE -208 -240 -208 -320 WIRE -208 -240 -240 -240 WIRE -304 -320 -752 -320 WIRE -304 -192 -304 -48 WIRE -304 624 -304 304 WIRE -160 384 -96 384 WIRE -96 384 -96 352 WIRE -304 704 -512 704 WIRE -16 704 -160 704 WIRE -16 304 -16 464 WIRE 1088 96 928 96 WIRE 240 496 400 496 WIRE 1264 176 1264 -320 WIRE 1168 16 1168 176 WIRE 1168 176 1152 176 WIRE 1184 176 1168 176 WIRE 1168 -64 1168 -288 WIRE 1168 -288 1088 -288 WIRE 1088 -192 1088 -288 WIRE 1088 -288 928 -288 WIRE 1088 -112 1088 96 WIRE -512 464 -16 464 WIRE -16 464 -16 624 FLAG -912 432 VVEA IOPIN -912 432 In FLAG 1456 -320 7V5 IOPIN 1456 -320 Out FLAG -880 736 0 FLAG 1456 -288 15V IOPIN 1456 -288 Out FLAG -912 -16 VFF IOPIN -912 -16 In FLAG -912 -352 IAC IOPIN -912 -352 In FLAG -880 160 0 SYMBOL npn -80 -16 R0 WINDOW 0 56 37 Left 0 WINDOW 3 56 59 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q7 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMBOL npn -240 -16 M0 WINDOW 0 98 38 Left 0 WINDOW 3 49 59 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q8 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMBOL npn 672 272 R0 WINDOW 3 56 56 Left 0 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMATTR InstName Q13 SYMBOL npn 992 272 M0 WINDOW 0 93 32 Left 0 WINDOW 3 53 56 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q14 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMBOL pnp 800 -48 R180 WINDOW 0 83 58 Left 0 WINDOW 3 49 37 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q19 SYMATTR Value 2N3906 SYMBOL pnp 864 -48 M180 WINDOW 0 53 58 Left 0 WINDOW 3 57 35 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q20 SYMATTR Value 2N3906 SYMBOL pnp 1152 224 R180 WINDOW 0 5 -22 Left 0 WINDOW 3 -27 -45 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q21 SYMATTR Value 2N3906 SYMBOL res 720 -272 R0 SYMATTR InstName R14 SYMATTR Value 1K SYMBOL res 912 -272 R0 SYMATTR InstName R15 SYMATTR Value 1K SYMBOL pnp -688 -48 R180 WINDOW 0 91 63 Left 0 WINDOW 3 55 37 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q15 SYMATTR Value 2N3906 SYMBOL pnp 80 -48 M180 WINDOW 0 53 58 Left 0 WINDOW 3 51 33 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q16 SYMATTR Value 2N3906 SYMBOL res -768 -272 R0 SYMATTR InstName R10 SYMATTR Value 1K SYMBOL res 128 -272 R0 SYMATTR InstName R11 SYMATTR Value 1K SYMBOL npn 704 464 M0 WINDOW 0 80 35 Left 0 WINDOW 3 32 56 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q5 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMBOL npn 768 464 R0 WINDOW 3 42 54 Left 0 WINDOW 0 43 34 Left 0 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMATTR InstName Q6 SYMBOL res 624 576 R0 WINDOW 0 40 47 Left 0 WINDOW 3 44 70 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName R7 SYMATTR Value 1K SYMBOL res 816 576 R0 WINDOW 0 43 44 Left 0 WINDOW 3 38 70 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName R8 SYMATTR Value 1K SYMBOL voltage 1264 576 R0 WINDOW 0 36 44 Left 0 WINDOW 3 38 71 Left 0 WINDOW 123 0 0 Left 0 WINDOW 39 0 0 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName VREF SYMATTR Value 7.5 SYMBOL voltage 1408 576 R0 WINDOW 0 38 37 Left 0 WINDOW 3 38 61 Left 0 WINDOW 123 0 0 Left 0 WINDOW 39 0 0 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName VCC SYMATTR Value 15V SYMBOL npn -640 464 M0 WINDOW 0 92 35 Left 0 WINDOW 3 43 58 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q1 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMBOL npn -576 464 R0 WINDOW 3 59 54 Left 0 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMATTR InstName Q2 SYMBOL res -720 576 R0 SYMATTR InstName R2 SYMATTR Value 1K SYMBOL res -528 576 R0 SYMATTR InstName R3 SYMATTR Value 1K SYMBOL res -720 416 R90 WINDOW 0 0 56 VBottom 0 WINDOW 3 32 56 VTop 0 SYMATTR InstName R1 SYMATTR Value 50K SYMBOL current -880 96 R180 WINDOW 0 -76 51 Left 0 WINDOW 3 -90 31 Left 0 WINDOW 123 0 0 Left 0 WINDOW 39 0 0 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName IAC SYMATTR Value 200µ SYMBOL current -752 16 R0 WINDOW 0 40 27 Left 0 WINDOW 3 40 49 Left 0 WINDOW 123 0 0 Left 0 WINDOW 39 0 0 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName IDIV SYMATTR Value 200µ SYMBOL current -880 672 R180 WINDOW 0 -69 42 Left 0 WINDOW 3 -93 30 Invisible 0 WINDOW 123 0 0 Left 0 WINDOW 39 0 0 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName IIN SYMATTR Value PULSE(100u 0 0 1 0 10 11) SYMBOL npn 240 448 R0 WINDOW 3 70 15 Left 0 WINDOW 0 71 -14 Left 0 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMATTR InstName Q11 SYMBOL npn 400 448 R0 WINDOW 0 78 32 Left 0 WINDOW 3 40 56 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q12 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMBOL npn 208 448 M0 WINDOW 0 92 35 Left 0 WINDOW 3 43 58 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q3 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMBOL res 160 576 M0 SYMATTR InstName R4 SYMATTR Value 1K SYMBOL res 288 576 R0 SYMATTR InstName R5 SYMATTR Value 1K SYMBOL npn 240 -288 R0 WINDOW 0 56 37 Left 0 WINDOW 3 56 59 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q9 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMBOL npn 528 -288 M0 WINDOW 0 89 38 Left 0 WINDOW 3 52 59 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q10 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMBOL res 448 576 R0 SYMATTR InstName R6 SYMATTR Value 1K SYMBOL npn -288 256 R0 WINDOW 3 56 56 Left 0 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMATTR InstName Q4 SYMBOL npn -32 256 M0 WINDOW 0 -15 112 Left 0 WINDOW 3 -47 140 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q17 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMBOL current -160 624 R0 WINDOW 0 40 27 Left 0 WINDOW 3 40 49 Left 0 WINDOW 123 0 0 Left 0 WINDOW 39 0 0 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName IBIAS1 SYMATTR Value 200µ SYMBOL npn -240 -288 M0 WINDOW 0 89 38 Left 0 WINDOW 3 52 59 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName Q18 SYMATTR Value 2N3904 SYMBOL current -304 624 R0 WINDOW 0 40 27 Left 0 WINDOW 3 40 49 Left 0 WINDOW 123 0 0 Left 0 WINDOW 39 0 0 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName IBIAS2 SYMATTR Value 200µ SYMBOL current -16 624 R0 WINDOW 0 40 27 Left 0 WINDOW 3 40 49 Left 0 WINDOW 123 0 0 Left 0 WINDOW 39 0 0 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName IBIAS3 SYMATTR Value 200µ SYMBOL H:\Applis\LTC\SwCADIII\lib\sym\res 1280 160 R90 WINDOW 0 0 56 VBottom 0 WINDOW 3 32 56 VTop 0 SYMATTR InstName R9 SYMATTR Value 1K SYMBOL H:\Applis\LTC\SwCADIII\lib\sym\res 1184 32 R180 WINDOW 0 36 76 Left 0 WINDOW 3 36 40 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName R12 SYMATTR Value 1K SYMBOL current 1088 -192 R0 WINDOW 0 -75 84 Left 0 WINDOW 3 -57 107 Left 0 WINDOW 123 0 0 Left 0 WINDOW 39 0 0 Left 0 SYMATTR InstName IBIAS4 SYMATTR Value 0µ TEXT -912 360 Left 0 !.tran 0 1 10u 10m TEXT -912 312 Left 0 !.STEP IDIV LIST 10U 20U 40U 80U 100u TEXT -912 336 Left 0 ;.op |
#17
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![]() "Fred Bartoli" r_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Genome a écrit : "Fred Bartoli" r_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Would you post the .asc file so that I don't have to redo it all? -- Thanks, Fred. Here you go..... I can't tell you what I am trying to do because Jim has just got out of bed in IC design mode (?). The last one might do what I am looking for but I have to crap about with things for longer to find out other stuff. Honest, don't waste too much time on it. I'm not going to pay (much) attention. Here it is. As I don't know what you're trying to do (well I have a bit of idea, but since you don't want to tell :-) this is probably not ideal and you probably can simplify things a bit, but you get the idea. -- Thanks, Fred. It's good of you to have a play with things. I'll have to study that lot for quite a while, there's probably some tricks I should be using. I'm having a go at simplifying what I've got. It's meant to be the multiplier/divider circuit for a power factor correction circuit. The output of the voltage error amplifier, ideally, should be multiplied by a value proportional to the rectified line voltage and divided by the square of the average line voltage. The output of the multiplier goes to the current error amplifier which controls line current. Proportional to the rectified line voltage makes the current drawn follow the voltage, giving a resistive load. Divided by the square of the average line voltage 'normalises'(?) the power circuit gain. If the rectified line doubles then the current draw should be halved and then you have to halve it again because the rectified line voltage used for the first multiplication doubled as well....... I'm doing this because I'm almost, sometime, never, going to get around to implementing a semi discrete PFC circuit and none of what is available as an IC really does the job I think I want to do and I've just got bored with them. Thanks for looking but your time might be better spent on other things since I'm prone to ignoring advice and generally just beat my head against stuff. Mind you some of this might filter into my head. If I come up with something I'll post it.... DNA |
#18
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![]() "John Larkin" wrote in message ... On Wed, 28 Mar 2007 13:17:32 GMT, "Genome" wrote: "Fred Bartoli" fred._canxxxel_this_bartoli@RemoveThatAlso_free .fr_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Genome a écrit : "Fred Bartoli" r_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Would you post the .asc file so that I don't have to redo it all? -- Thanks, Fred. Here you go..... I can't tell you what I am trying to do because Jim has just got out of bed in IC design mode (?). The last one might do what I am looking for but I have to crap about with things for longer to find out other stuff. Honest, don't waste too much time on it. I'm not going to pay (much) attention. Here it is. As I don't know what you're trying to do (well I have a bit of idea, but since you don't want to tell :-) this is probably not ideal and you probably can simplify things a bit, but you get the idea. -- Thanks, Fred. It's good of you to have a play with things. I'll have to study that lot for quite a while, there's probably some tricks I should be using. I'm having a go at simplifying what I've got. It's meant to be the multiplier/divider circuit for a power factor correction circuit. The output of the voltage error amplifier, ideally, should be multiplied by a value proportional to the rectified line voltage and divided by the square of the average line voltage. The output of the multiplier goes to the current error amplifier which controls line current. Proportional to the rectified line voltage makes the current drawn follow the voltage, giving a resistive load. Divided by the square of the average line voltage 'normalises'(?) the power circuit gain. If the rectified line doubles then the current draw should be halved and then you have to halve it again because the rectified line voltage used for the first multiplication doubled as well....... I'm doing this because I'm almost, sometime, never, going to get around to implementing a semi discrete PFC circuit and none of what is available as an IC really does the job I think I want to do and I've just got bored with them. Thanks for looking but your time might be better spent on other things since I'm prone to ignoring advice and generally just beat my head against stuff. Mind you some of this might filter into my head. If I come up with something I'll post it.... DNA This sort of design, like most everything else, is eventually going digital. Some crap 75 cent uP with on-chip mux'd ADC could run a tight loop doing nothing but this algorithm maybe 20,000 times a second and output PWM directly. It could do all sorts of rampup, duty-cycle limiting, feedforward tricks, current sensing, loop compensation... there's no limit. It's almost tragic. John ......... You are probably not wrong..... It depends on how much people are prepared to dumb down the specs to cope with the new age of dumbness. Who am I to speak? I'd be tempted to have a bash myself (thought about it) but then again I wouldn't..... Hmmmmm, there is going to be some sort of division of labour involved in such a solution. Can we talk synergy? No, beyond some final year thesis, I don't think it's going to happen....... One day PID control will rule the world....... bummer. DNA |
#19
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On Wed, 28 Mar 2007 13:17:32 GMT, "Genome"
wrote: "Fred Bartoli" fred._canxxxel_this_bartoli@RemoveThatAlso_free. fr_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Genome a écrit : "Fred Bartoli" r_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Would you post the .asc file so that I don't have to redo it all? -- Thanks, Fred. Here you go..... I can't tell you what I am trying to do because Jim has just got out of bed in IC design mode (?). The last one might do what I am looking for but I have to crap about with things for longer to find out other stuff. Honest, don't waste too much time on it. I'm not going to pay (much) attention. Here it is. As I don't know what you're trying to do (well I have a bit of idea, but since you don't want to tell :-) this is probably not ideal and you probably can simplify things a bit, but you get the idea. -- Thanks, Fred. It's good of you to have a play with things. I'll have to study that lot for quite a while, there's probably some tricks I should be using. I'm having a go at simplifying what I've got. It's meant to be the multiplier/divider circuit for a power factor correction circuit. The output of the voltage error amplifier, ideally, should be multiplied by a value proportional to the rectified line voltage and divided by the square of the average line voltage. The output of the multiplier goes to the current error amplifier which controls line current. Proportional to the rectified line voltage makes the current drawn follow the voltage, giving a resistive load. Divided by the square of the average line voltage 'normalises'(?) the power circuit gain. If the rectified line doubles then the current draw should be halved and then you have to halve it again because the rectified line voltage used for the first multiplication doubled as well....... I'm doing this because I'm almost, sometime, never, going to get around to implementing a semi discrete PFC circuit and none of what is available as an IC really does the job I think I want to do and I've just got bored with them. Thanks for looking but your time might be better spent on other things since I'm prone to ignoring advice and generally just beat my head against stuff. Mind you some of this might filter into my head. If I come up with something I'll post it.... DNA This sort of design, like most everything else, is eventually going digital. Some crap 75 cent uP with on-chip mux'd ADC could run a tight loop doing nothing but this algorithm maybe 20,000 times a second and output PWM directly. It could do all sorts of rampup, duty-cycle limiting, feedforward tricks, current sensing, loop compensation... there's no limit. It's almost tragic. John |
#20
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Posted to alt.binaries.schematics.electronic
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On Wed, 28 Mar 2007 16:22:40 GMT, "Genome"
wrote: "John Larkin" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 28 Mar 2007 13:17:32 GMT, "Genome" wrote: "Fred Bartoli" fred._canxxxel_this_bartoli@RemoveThatAlso_fre e.fr_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Genome a écrit : "Fred Bartoli" r_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Would you post the .asc file so that I don't have to redo it all? -- Thanks, Fred. Here you go..... I can't tell you what I am trying to do because Jim has just got out of bed in IC design mode (?). The last one might do what I am looking for but I have to crap about with things for longer to find out other stuff. Honest, don't waste too much time on it. I'm not going to pay (much) attention. Here it is. As I don't know what you're trying to do (well I have a bit of idea, but since you don't want to tell :-) this is probably not ideal and you probably can simplify things a bit, but you get the idea. -- Thanks, Fred. It's good of you to have a play with things. I'll have to study that lot for quite a while, there's probably some tricks I should be using. I'm having a go at simplifying what I've got. It's meant to be the multiplier/divider circuit for a power factor correction circuit. The output of the voltage error amplifier, ideally, should be multiplied by a value proportional to the rectified line voltage and divided by the square of the average line voltage. The output of the multiplier goes to the current error amplifier which controls line current. Proportional to the rectified line voltage makes the current drawn follow the voltage, giving a resistive load. Divided by the square of the average line voltage 'normalises'(?) the power circuit gain. If the rectified line doubles then the current draw should be halved and then you have to halve it again because the rectified line voltage used for the first multiplication doubled as well....... I'm doing this because I'm almost, sometime, never, going to get around to implementing a semi discrete PFC circuit and none of what is available as an IC really does the job I think I want to do and I've just got bored with them. Thanks for looking but your time might be better spent on other things since I'm prone to ignoring advice and generally just beat my head against stuff. Mind you some of this might filter into my head. If I come up with something I'll post it.... DNA This sort of design, like most everything else, is eventually going digital. Some crap 75 cent uP with on-chip mux'd ADC could run a tight loop doing nothing but this algorithm maybe 20,000 times a second and output PWM directly. It could do all sorts of rampup, duty-cycle limiting, feedforward tricks, current sensing, loop compensation... there's no limit. It's almost tragic. John ......... You are probably not wrong..... It depends on how much people are prepared to dumb down the specs to cope with the new age of dumbness. Who am I to speak? I'd be tempted to have a bash myself (thought about it) but then again I wouldn't..... Hmmmmm, there is going to be some sort of division of labour involved in such a solution. Can we talk synergy? No, beyond some final year thesis, I don't think it's going to happen....... One day PID control will rule the world....... bummer. DNA Digital power supplies are the future... http://powerelectronics.com/digital_power/ But it's 100x easier for a power supply designer to learn to program than it is for a programmer to understand power supplies. Well, maybe 1000x. John |
#21
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Posted to alt.binaries.schematics.electronic
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![]() "John Larkin" wrote in message ... On Wed, 28 Mar 2007 16:22:40 GMT, "Genome" wrote: "John Larkin" wrote in message . .. On Wed, 28 Mar 2007 13:17:32 GMT, "Genome" wrote: "Fred Bartoli" fred._canxxxel_this_bartoli@RemoveThatAlso_fr ee.fr_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Genome a écrit : "Fred Bartoli" r_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Would you post the .asc file so that I don't have to redo it all? -- Thanks, Fred. Here you go..... I can't tell you what I am trying to do because Jim has just got out of bed in IC design mode (?). The last one might do what I am looking for but I have to crap about with things for longer to find out other stuff. Honest, don't waste too much time on it. I'm not going to pay (much) attention. Here it is. As I don't know what you're trying to do (well I have a bit of idea, but since you don't want to tell :-) this is probably not ideal and you probably can simplify things a bit, but you get the idea. -- Thanks, Fred. It's good of you to have a play with things. I'll have to study that lot for quite a while, there's probably some tricks I should be using. I'm having a go at simplifying what I've got. It's meant to be the multiplier/divider circuit for a power factor correction circuit. The output of the voltage error amplifier, ideally, should be multiplied by a value proportional to the rectified line voltage and divided by the square of the average line voltage. The output of the multiplier goes to the current error amplifier which controls line current. Proportional to the rectified line voltage makes the current drawn follow the voltage, giving a resistive load. Divided by the square of the average line voltage 'normalises'(?) the power circuit gain. If the rectified line doubles then the current draw should be halved and then you have to halve it again because the rectified line voltage used for the first multiplication doubled as well....... I'm doing this because I'm almost, sometime, never, going to get around to implementing a semi discrete PFC circuit and none of what is available as an IC really does the job I think I want to do and I've just got bored with them. Thanks for looking but your time might be better spent on other things since I'm prone to ignoring advice and generally just beat my head against stuff. Mind you some of this might filter into my head. If I come up with something I'll post it.... DNA This sort of design, like most everything else, is eventually going digital. Some crap 75 cent uP with on-chip mux'd ADC could run a tight loop doing nothing but this algorithm maybe 20,000 times a second and output PWM directly. It could do all sorts of rampup, duty-cycle limiting, feedforward tricks, current sensing, loop compensation... there's no limit. It's almost tragic. John ......... You are probably not wrong..... It depends on how much people are prepared to dumb down the specs to cope with the new age of dumbness. Who am I to speak? I'd be tempted to have a bash myself (thought about it) but then again I wouldn't..... Hmmmmm, there is going to be some sort of division of labour involved in such a solution. Can we talk synergy? No, beyond some final year thesis, I don't think it's going to happen....... One day PID control will rule the world....... bummer. DNA Digital power supplies are the future... http://powerelectronics.com/digital_power/ But it's 100x easier for a power supply designer to learn to program than it is for a programmer to understand power supplies. Well, maybe 1000x. John Mumble. All you need is a TCP gargle stack and you are set to download the latest malicious siftware removal tool. Interesting point though..... although I would have problims explaining why. DNA |
#22
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John Larkin wrote:
On Wed, 28 Mar 2007 16:22:40 GMT, "Genome" wrote: "John Larkin" wrote in message ... On Wed, 28 Mar 2007 13:17:32 GMT, "Genome" wrote: "Fred Bartoli" fred._canxxxel_this_bartoli@RemoveThatAlso_fr ee.fr_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Genome a écrit : "Fred Bartoli" r_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Would you post the .asc file so that I don't have to redo it all? -- Thanks, Fred. Here you go..... I can't tell you what I am trying to do because Jim has just got out of bed in IC design mode (?). The last one might do what I am looking for but I have to crap about with things for longer to find out other stuff. Honest, don't waste too much time on it. I'm not going to pay (much) attention. Here it is. As I don't know what you're trying to do (well I have a bit of idea, but since you don't want to tell :-) this is probably not ideal and you probably can simplify things a bit, but you get the idea. -- Thanks, Fred. It's good of you to have a play with things. I'll have to study that lot for quite a while, there's probably some tricks I should be using. I'm having a go at simplifying what I've got. It's meant to be the multiplier/divider circuit for a power factor correction circuit. The output of the voltage error amplifier, ideally, should be multiplied by a value proportional to the rectified line voltage and divided by the square of the average line voltage. The output of the multiplier goes to the current error amplifier which controls line current. Proportional to the rectified line voltage makes the current drawn follow the voltage, giving a resistive load. Divided by the square of the average line voltage 'normalises'(?) the power circuit gain. If the rectified line doubles then the current draw should be halved and then you have to halve it again because the rectified line voltage used for the first multiplication doubled as well....... I'm doing this because I'm almost, sometime, never, going to get around to implementing a semi discrete PFC circuit and none of what is available as an IC really does the job I think I want to do and I've just got bored with them. Thanks for looking but your time might be better spent on other things since I'm prone to ignoring advice and generally just beat my head against stuff. Mind you some of this might filter into my head. If I come up with something I'll post it.... DNA This sort of design, like most everything else, is eventually going digital. Some crap 75 cent uP with on-chip mux'd ADC could run a tight loop doing nothing but this algorithm maybe 20,000 times a second and output PWM directly. It could do all sorts of rampup, duty-cycle limiting, feedforward tricks, current sensing, loop compensation... there's no limit. It's almost tragic. John ......... You are probably not wrong..... It depends on how much people are prepared to dumb down the specs to cope with the new age of dumbness. Who am I to speak? I'd be tempted to have a bash myself (thought about it) but then again I wouldn't..... Hmmmmm, there is going to be some sort of division of labour involved in such a solution. Can we talk synergy? No, beyond some final year thesis, I don't think it's going to happen....... One day PID control will rule the world....... bummer. DNA Digital power supplies are the future... http://powerelectronics.com/digital_power/ But it's 100x easier for a power supply designer to learn to program than it is for a programmer to understand power supplies. Well, maybe 1000x. John It opens up the possibility for some truly spectacular software bugs. Somehow I think it will increase the importance of having a good hardware crowbar at the output and probably a hardware cycle-by-cycle current limit, and a handy fire extinguisher. Chris |
#23
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Chris Jones wrote:
John Larkin wrote: On Wed, 28 Mar 2007 16:22:40 GMT, "Genome" wrote: "John Larkin" wrote in message ... On Wed, 28 Mar 2007 13:17:32 GMT, "Genome" wrote: "Fred Bartoli" fred._canxxxel_this_bartoli@RemoveThatAlso_f ree.fr_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Genome a écrit : "Fred Bartoli" r_AndThisToo wrote in message ... Would you post the .asc file so that I don't have to redo it all? -- Thanks, Fred. Here you go..... I can't tell you what I am trying to do because Jim has just got out of bed in IC design mode (?). The last one might do what I am looking for but I have to crap about with things for longer to find out other stuff. Honest, don't waste too much time on it. I'm not going to pay (much) attention. Here it is. As I don't know what you're trying to do (well I have a bit of idea, but since you don't want to tell :-) this is probably not ideal and you probably can simplify things a bit, but you get the idea. -- Thanks, Fred. It's good of you to have a play with things. I'll have to study that lot for quite a while, there's probably some tricks I should be using. I'm having a go at simplifying what I've got. It's meant to be the multiplier/divider circuit for a power factor correction circuit. The output of the voltage error amplifier, ideally, should be multiplied by a value proportional to the rectified line voltage and divided by the square of the average line voltage. The output of the multiplier goes to the current error amplifier which controls line current. Proportional to the rectified line voltage makes the current drawn follow the voltage, giving a resistive load. Divided by the square of the average line voltage 'normalises'(?) the power circuit gain. If the rectified line doubles then the current draw should be halved and then you have to halve it again because the rectified line voltage used for the first multiplication doubled as well....... I'm doing this because I'm almost, sometime, never, going to get around to implementing a semi discrete PFC circuit and none of what is available as an IC really does the job I think I want to do and I've just got bored with them. Thanks for looking but your time might be better spent on other things since I'm prone to ignoring advice and generally just beat my head against stuff. Mind you some of this might filter into my head. If I come up with something I'll post it.... DNA This sort of design, like most everything else, is eventually going digital. Some crap 75 cent uP with on-chip mux'd ADC could run a tight loop doing nothing but this algorithm maybe 20,000 times a second and output PWM directly. It could do all sorts of rampup, duty-cycle limiting, feedforward tricks, current sensing, loop compensation... there's no limit. It's almost tragic. John ......... You are probably not wrong..... It depends on how much people are prepared to dumb down the specs to cope with the new age of dumbness. Who am I to speak? I'd be tempted to have a bash myself (thought about it) but then again I wouldn't..... Hmmmmm, there is going to be some sort of division of labour involved in such a solution. Can we talk synergy? No, beyond some final year thesis, I don't think it's going to happen....... One day PID control will rule the world....... bummer. DNA Digital power supplies are the future... http://powerelectronics.com/digital_power/ But it's 100x easier for a power supply designer to learn to program than it is for a programmer to understand power supplies. Well, maybe 1000x. John It opens up the possibility for some truly spectacular software bugs. Somehow I think it will increase the importance of having a good hardware crowbar at the output and probably a hardware cycle-by-cycle current limit, and a handy fire extinguisher. Chris Not to mention some good quality fuses to backup the fancy stuff. -- JosephKK Gegen dummheit kampfen die Gotter Selbst, vergebens.Â*Â* --Schiller |
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