A
amdx
Guest
 On one of the groups I monitor, it was ask if the tube circuit shown
below could be bootstrapped to raise the input impedance,
especially at the higher frequencies where it drops pretty low. (purpose
is to reduce loading on the LC being measured--Q meter)
 Can you give a little detail on how you would implement it? And what
happens to gain and frequency response?
When was bootstrapping introduced, the word started in the 1880s, but
when was it first used in an electrical circuit?
I did manage to find a bootstrapped tube circuit, but it didn\'t use a
100MΩ grid resistor, Is that a detriment to adding bootstrapping?
 I made my proposed idea on the right side.
Hmm, the problem is more the tube input than the 100MΩ, does
bootstrapping help that?
 Might be barking up the wrong tree.
                           Thanks, Mikek
below could be bootstrapped to raise the input impedance,
especially at the higher frequencies where it drops pretty low. (purpose
is to reduce loading on the LC being measured--Q meter)
 Can you give a little detail on how you would implement it? And what
happens to gain and frequency response?
When was bootstrapping introduced, the word started in the 1880s, but
when was it first used in an electrical circuit?
I did manage to find a bootstrapped tube circuit, but it didn\'t use a
100MΩ grid resistor, Is that a detriment to adding bootstrapping?
 I made my proposed idea on the right side.
Hmm, the problem is more the tube input than the 100MΩ, does
bootstrapping help that?
 Might be barking up the wrong tree.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/in6no3nvw0qnie7/Boonton%20260A%20Tube%20bootstrap%20question.jpg?dl=0
                           Thanks, Mikek