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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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I'm reading Tom Frederickson's "Intuitive IC Op Amps" - in particular pg 15
concerning the op-amp schematic, and am not sure how the second stage of the op amp works. This stage that takes the single ended current and converts it a voltage before it's off to the output stage. The current input goes to the base of a transistor whose emitter is connected directly to ground and the freq compensating capacitor is placed across the collector and base. How does this configuration work - especially if the base input current is negative? Current is sourced from cap? Horowitz and Hill's 741 schematic has a 300 ohm resistor on the base input. Is this where the current to voltage conversion takes place and was omitted by Frederickson? In either case, still not sure where current comes from when current mirror sinks current in stage 1. If the sinking current mirror pulls from the cap, I would expect the mirror, when sourcing current, to load the cap by symmetry. But in a sourcing configuation, the transistor is now forward biased. If current is being sunk @ constant rate, wouldn't the magnitude of the voltage across the cap ramp wrt time? I expected the output voltage to be proportional to input differential voltage and not ramp in an open loop config. Can somebody explain how current is converted to voltage in stage 2 of an op-amp? Totally unrelated, but what does it mean when a NPN transistor has two or more emitters in a schematic? Thanks, Monty |
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