R
Ricky
Guest
I have an audio amplifier circuit that uses an op amp I can\'t buy anymore because of the semiconductor shortage. It\'s not extremely special, but it drives highly capacitive loads (like a few hundred feet of cable) and will drive a 62.1 ohm load with 75 mA. I\'d actually like a higher drive, but this was the best I could find in 2008 when I designed it and I\'ve found nothing better since.
Two main requirements are low power consumption (the LM8272 is around 1 mA per amp) and small size (8 pin MSOP dual).
I\'m wondering if I might replace these with a push-pull transistor output stage. The outputs are differential, so I would need an inverter to drive them. The current circuit uses positive feedback to allow a 12.1 ohm resistor to emulate a 50 ohm output impedance. In the new design this will have an analog switch to change between 300 ohm and 50 ohm. I can\'t see a useful way to do this same trick with a push-pull output. So this idea is not looking so great.
I looked at audio drivers for headphones and speakers. The lower power devices all run on 5V power, while I need 12V power. The devices that use 12V power are pretty much all class D or similar and require output filtering which uses too much space.
I\'ve even looked for amps with differential outputs, but nothing workable. Price is not a huge issue, but some of these parts are $10 a pop and I need two channels of differential drivers. $40 is a bit steep.
Any ideas?
--
Rick C.
- Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
- Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
Two main requirements are low power consumption (the LM8272 is around 1 mA per amp) and small size (8 pin MSOP dual).
I\'m wondering if I might replace these with a push-pull transistor output stage. The outputs are differential, so I would need an inverter to drive them. The current circuit uses positive feedback to allow a 12.1 ohm resistor to emulate a 50 ohm output impedance. In the new design this will have an analog switch to change between 300 ohm and 50 ohm. I can\'t see a useful way to do this same trick with a push-pull output. So this idea is not looking so great.
I looked at audio drivers for headphones and speakers. The lower power devices all run on 5V power, while I need 12V power. The devices that use 12V power are pretty much all class D or similar and require output filtering which uses too much space.
I\'ve even looked for amps with differential outputs, but nothing workable. Price is not a huge issue, but some of these parts are $10 a pop and I need two channels of differential drivers. $40 is a bit steep.
Any ideas?
--
Rick C.
- Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
- Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209