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Fantastic P.I front end building block

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  • Fantastic P.I front end building block

    This is an audio preamp circuit, but with slight mods to the gain path makes a cutting edge P.I front end. Minelab use AD797 chips in the front end but these become unstable at high input impedance. Using a J-fet input negates the negative effect on stabillity that is caused by off time of the front end.

    Noise is still 0.9nv/hz so it makes for a fantastic building block.
    http://www.audioxpress.com/magsdirx/.../colin2764.pdf

  • #2
    http://www.analog.com/UploadedFiles/...eets/OP470.pdf
    Attached Files

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    • #3
      Low Noise Fet I Use

      Hi Woody,

      These are the low noise fets I use

      in my home built PI and VLF detectors.

      Have used the Fet/opamp deal for decades.

      Works well, anyway Interfet likes to sell

      quantity so have to give a story and get

      samples.

      Use two and get 0.25 nv/rootHz.

      Hi Wizard,

      Yes, that is a configuration that was

      actually used on an old VLF detector,

      I don't remember which detector but

      it was older quad opamp, not OP470s.

      http://www.interfet.com/#

      http://www.interfet.com/pdf/DS_IF9030.pdf

      Comment


      • #4
        Why do you always use such short lines when you type?

        Comment


        • #5
          Maybe is a poet.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Esteban View Post
            Maybe is a poet.
            Or use a text editor with word-wrap at 40... some old email programs have that...or send messages just from the shell... on the fly!

            I know of people that use unix-VI to send emails

            (ehm... well... I've done too in some "happy hours"... but that's another story )

            Comment


            • #7
              Font too large

              My font is set too large

              so not much fits in the

              reply box they give you.

              and my keyboard is old

              and the carriage return

              always does two.

              Comment


              • #8
                You don't need to hit the carriage return when you get to the right side of the reply box... just keep typing, and it will wrap itself. Hit return at the end-of-paragraph.

                Oh yeah, little "up" and "down" arrows in the upper-right corner of the reply box let you enlarge the reply box.

                Comment


                • #9
                  It's a Joke Carl

                  Originally posted by Carl-NC View Post
                  You don't need to hit the carriage return when you get to the right side of the reply box... just keep typing, and it will wrap itself. Hit return at the end-of-paragraph.

                  Oh yeah, little "up" and "down" arrows in the upper-right corner of the reply box let you enlarge the reply box.
                  It's a Joke Carl

                  I know how to

                  work a computer.

                  Really.

                  And my keyboard

                  ain't broke none

                  either.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Front End

                    And it is easier to read. Then stuff all strung out all over the place, and to a computer it is probably not much bigger in memory or anything.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Don't need no feedback

                      And when you are designing your front end Fet electronics save yourselfs some trouble and a simple grounded source fet with a drain/gain resistor based on gfs of about a gain of 20 to 30 then AC couple to the op amp more voltage gain. The voltage gain of 20 to 30 will make all the noise spec fall onto the fet and virtually none on the op amp. 1/A^2 of the first stage. No feedback to the fet. or you can feedback if you wish no biggy as long as you don't have any trouble with the oscillations.

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                      • #12
                        common Low noise design


                        The Wizards design is common one in parallel, one can use LT1028 too. Or use low noise opamps cooled by liwuid nitrogen or helium....

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          some additions

                          Originally posted by sharky View Post
                          The Wizards design is common one in parallel, one can use LT1028 too. Or use low noise opamps cooled by liwuid nitrogen or helium....
                          The Wizards design is common similar circuit from elecktor old edition 1997 or older in parallel using LT1028 too. Or use low noise opamps cooled by liwuid nitrogen or helium....

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                          • #14
                            costly


                            Whats the noise now cube/sqrt of the three!!! also the opamps are costly cant we use a low noise japanese Transistors in parallel !!!!

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                            • #15
                              yes you can

                              Originally posted by sharky View Post
                              Whats the noise now cube/sqrt of the three!!! also the opamps are costly cant we use a low noise japanese Transistors in parallel !!!!
                              Hey Sharky,

                              The old Corbon {misspell} does use transistor amplifier for

                              front end. He also uses analog switches to turn off input

                              during xmit. Good move. now you can have low noise fet

                              and then follow with transistors amplifier. Or if you are real

                              good you can make fet/transistor amp that recovers from

                              xmit flyback fast {hint don't saturate transistors or fet}

                              and get rid of the switches tooo.

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