E
Eeyore
Guest
John Larkin wrote:
have local feedback within the overall loop though.
Graham
They would have to be fast for sure with decent DC and AC precision."Kevin Aylward" wrote:
The point I am making is that this type of loop within a loop, does not
allow the overall speed of the complete amplifier to be made faster, if the
amplifier would otherwise already be optimumally designed for speed, despite
the allegation that it increases the net response of the output devices. It
doesn't, as a simple calculation will show. What it does buy is better LF
*accuracy* at the expense of speed.
Well, neither. I was suggesting a fast opamp
Does it ? Hadn't looked closely enough.*per fet*, with feedback
from the source, to make each fet look like an ideal transconductance
device, perfectly linear, no offset or threshold, all exactly matched,
with very low input capacitance.
But how does improving and parallelizing gate drives cost speed? It
makes my amps faster and a lot more stable. Your amp (the one you
never built) has a couple of wimpy current sources driving 10 fets in
parallel;
That's what I do tooI'm suggesting a beefy voltage source per fet gate,
Only overall in my case to linearise the output section. All previous gain stageswith local feedback.
have local feedback within the overall loop though.
Graham