741 Op Amp Circuitry Question

Guest
Take a look at the schematic of the 741 on Wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operational_amplifier

Here's my question. Let's say the rails are at +15 and -15 volts and
the output of the differential amplifier (blue box in the figure) is
+12 volts. That would mean that the base of Q15 would be at 12 volts,
the base of Q19 would be at about 11.4 volts, and the emitter of Q19
would be at about 10.8 volts. That would result in 25.8 volts across
the 50 ohm resistor, requiring 516mA of current.

However, using the assumed values at the rails, the Q12/Q13 current
mirror would only be able to provide a maximum of 738uA, which is 700
times less current than would be required by the emitter output of
Q19.

How does this circuit work? What am I missing?
 
In article <1178131276.601299.16990@q75g2000hsh.googlegroups.com>,
nealkendrick@juno.com says...
Take a look at the schematic of the 741 on Wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operational_amplifier

Here's my question. Let's say the rails are at +15 and -15 volts and
the output of the differential amplifier (blue box in the figure) is
+12 volts.
Won't happen. The output of the diff amp is *current*, and the
voltage at that node will be in the neighborhood of 1 Volt.
 
On May 2, 3:10 pm, Bill S. <NoS...@OnMe.com> wrote:

Won't happen. The output of the diff amp is *current*, and the
voltage at that node will be in the neighborhood of 1 Volt.
Ok, if you apply 1 Volt at that node, you'll have -0.2V at the emitter
of Q19, which will try to draw 296mA (more than is available) through
Q19, correct? That would be 14.8 volts across the 50 ohm resistor.
 
On 2 May 2007 11:41:16 -0700, nealkendrick@juno.com wrote:

Take a look at the schematic of the 741 on Wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operational_amplifier

Here's my question. Let's say the rails are at +15 and -15 volts and
the output of the differential amplifier (blue box in the figure) is
+12 volts. That would mean that the base of Q15 would be at 12 volts,
the base of Q19 would be at about 11.4 volts, and the emitter of Q19
would be at about 10.8 volts. That would result in 25.8 volts across
the 50 ohm resistor, requiring 516mA of current.

However, using the assumed values at the rails, the Q12/Q13 current
mirror would only be able to provide a maximum of 738uA, which is 700
times less current than would be required by the emitter output of
Q19.

How does this circuit work? What am I missing?
Q15/Q19 are Darlington connected to provide hi Z input load for Q4/Q6
high impedance current output. This is where most of the single pole
(with the 30pf cap) gain is achieved. Under op amp closed loop
conditions, Q15+Q19 current exactly matches the Q12/Q13 mirror current
to produce zero op amp output voltage. This would not turn Q22 on at
all. The Q22/50ohm combo is there as a current limit for op amp output
negative excursion short circuit current limiting. Note that positive
excursion output current limiting is via Q17.

Dick Ballard
ballardr@att.net
 

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