T
Tom
Guest
On Mar 5, 6:34 pm, John Popelish <jpopel...@rica.net> wrote:
I will give it a try.
Tom
Thanks John,Tom wrote:
I finished up the circuit for the VU meter. It worked great when I
hooked the inputs to my iPod, so this morning I began installing it in
the amp(I was supposed to be painting the house, and there was hell to
pay) Well lo and behold, it does not work. I was wondering if any one
could help me out? Below is a simple diagram I made in SPICE.
Diagram at ->http://spilledwhine.com/pics/AmpCircuit.JPG
Please note that the values are correct and the bridge is actually a
chip, but I did not find one in the library, so I just drew 4 diodes.
My meter is the between the bridge and resistor.
The problem I am having is that when I connect the signal ground to
the amp, it seems to remove my floating ground, so that the input to
the op-amp is now 27V, where as when it is hooked to the iPod, the
power is properly split +13.5/-13.5. I am sure it has to do with using
a virtual ground in this setup. I think the virtual ground is getting
shorted out to system ground.
I have been looking into using something like a MAX4242 Op-amp that
does beyond-the-rail. From the literature, it can be used for AC
without any bias. I am hoping that it could be the solution.
Can anyone help me out?
I think you can correct the problem by adding another p[air
of resistors in series, somewhat like the two that connect
to the inverting input, but connected to the non inverting
input. A pair of 100k resistors would work. Then add a DC
blocking capacitor between the signal input and the non
inverting input. Then eliminate the input signal ground
connection to the resistor divider. This assumes that one
side of the supply is already connected to signal common,
somewhere else. To simulate that, you will have to connect
your simulation source as the actual circuit connects it to
the supply.
--
Regards,
John Popelish
I will give it a try.
Tom