fezder
Well-Known Member
thanks for offer, but i think i build this myself, just for training if nothing elseIf you want them, you can have them for Free, Just Pay the Shipping Cost.
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thanks for offer, but i think i build this myself, just for training if nothing elseIf you want them, you can have them for Free, Just Pay the Shipping Cost.
well, when i bought this amplfier many years ago, i did't pay attention to stuff like this, was just looking for ''all-round'' 5.1 amplfier which has plenty I/O's, wattage didn't matter much as i don't listen music loud.Your amplifier is rated to produce 100W at low distortion but only when one of its 6 outputs is playing which is odd. The spec's do not say how much the output power drops when more than one channel is playing.
what is this maxinum at this situation?The peak detector will be destroyed if the signal is higher than it is designed for.
you mean that both are shown at same bar graph? not bad idea, dunno what it would look thoughHow about an LM3915 that shows the peak AND the instantaneous simultaneously?
well i measured around 10mv from speaker volume down, still on of course, but my meter doesn't have true-RMS or any of that fancier stuff, should look with scope to get better value.....i sometimes forget that i lack DMM that has RMS or similar, but it has at least data hold (rish multi 14, found from local auction site for 20 euros)If you listen to music with the volume turned down so the average power is 1W then peaks can be as high as 14W without sounding too loud.
No rush,i could perhaps do that myself too but i think i lack knowledge for that one heheI was thinking about adding a biased opamp follower to the input of the peak detector and use diodes to limit its input swing to almost the supply voltage of a single positive supply but sorry, I am too busy to doo dat.
ew, thought so....time for scoping. I do have subwoofer, bought it just because my speakers didn't output enought bass for my liking, even they are car speakers in custom made boxes, 6x9'' 4 way, sony xplod, only they were bought used and it sounds like coil or something is hitting something (not bottoming thought) at left front channel. Haven't seen anything that would cause that noise during bass-based music, but i'm planning to buy new pair, probadly similar because sound is good so makes buying easier with these specs (unless these specs are false of course....)Most multimeters measure only 50Hz and 60Hz accurately. Sometimes only your sub-woofer plays those frequencies. Other channels on your 5.1 amplifier produce those frequencies at very low levels (10mV).
ah, clever. That was in my mind too but have absolutely no clue what sort of microphones do their job for such application, and the there's placing ''problem'' tooMy "VU bar graph" does not connect to my amplifier because its input is a microphone. It displays the loudness of the TV, the stereo and talking.
6x9' speakers cannot produce deep bass frequencies. 4-way is not needed, 2-way is fine for 6x9" speakers.my speakers didn't output enought bass for my liking, ..... 6x9''
They cannot spec how a speaker will sound and they lie a lot anyway.(unless these specs are false of course....)
I use electret mics that are inexpensive, available everywhere and work very well.That was in my mind too but have absolutely no clue what sort of microphones do their job for such application, and the there's placing ''problem'' too
Thanks. It is a copy of single-sided Veroboard made in China. The copper strips form half of a pcb and the parts and a few short jumper wires form the other half.is that veroboard in that enclosure double sided? nice build & schematic!
Opamp IC1b has a low output current so it drives Q2 that can apply a lot of current to quickly charge peak holding capacitor C8 but allow R13 to discharge it slower. Q1 has the same Vbe voltage drop as Q2 and applies negative feedback to the opamp. Q3 quickly charges capacitor C9 then it discharges very slowly (about 2.5 seconds) into the resistor ladder in the LM3915. The voltage on C9 feeds Rhi of the resistor ladder but resistor R15 biases C9 at about 0.56V when sound levels are low so the circuit is very sensitive. Loud sounds cause Q3 to charge C9 to 10 times the 0.56V idle voltage that reduces the sensitivity 20dB.understand that peak-detector section somewhat, but, what function is with those Q1 & Q3?
IC1a is a standard opamp biased at half the supply voltage. The two 100k resistors in series from +5V to ground make 2.5V. The 2.5V is fed through the 47k resistor R4 to the (+) input of the opamp so that its input and output can swing up and down.Suppose for mic-amp section, non-inverting output has dc-offset made with those 100k & 47k resistors. C1 is at lest so dc won't go from power rails to that non-inverting output yes?
this is true indeedthey lie a lot anyway.
Personally I Prefer an Analogue VU Meter.
I too mostly prefer analog meters, give better overall perspective on things, like car rpm meter and such. But, it's good to test around and play with different crcuitsPersonally I Prefer an Analogue VU Meter.
Yes, this i was too wondering last night, as they have such ''strange'' resistor ladders inside, logaritmic scale won't be logaritmic when they are just chained together.I guess the LM3915's didn't get away since they are "chained"
that is current circuit in use, along with peak-detector of yoursYou might as well use an opamp to increase the signal to the lowest level one to avoid input offset voltage problems with very low levels.