Sujet : Re: Five transistor version of the low distortion sine-wave oscillator
De : bill.sloman (at) *nospam* ieee.org (Bill Sloman)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 15. Apr 2025, 08:03:01
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
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On 15/04/2025 1:56 am, Edward Rawde wrote:
"Bill Sloman" <bill.sloman@ieee.org> wrote in message news:vtihob$sfdm$1@dont-email.me...
On 12/04/2025 6:27 pm, Bill Sloman wrote:
Edward Rawde posted an eight-transistor low distortion sine wave oscillator circuit recently, and John May pointed out that you
could leave out half the transistors.
>
I couldn't immediately see exactly how either of the circuits worked, though I could get the simulations to run under LTSpice and
see roughly what was going on.
>
I've now dug a bit deeper. Here is a five transistor version of John May's four transistor version.
>
Out of curiousity,
Is that allowed Bill? I thought that making component changes to see if the circuit works better was design by evolution?
I didn't make the change to see whether it worked better - I did it to see if I'd correctly understood what it was doing. The fact that it made it work better was incidental.
I upped the currents through Q1A and Q1B by about an order of magnitude (R27 down to 27k, R17 down to 22kk and R28 down to 68k)
and the worst case harmonic became the second at 2kHz, 155dB below the the fundamental. The fourth was close behind at at about
157dB down.
>
Essentially, their incremental resistance has dropped by an order of magnitude, and the ripple on the gain-control signal produces
less voltage excursion. >> > Did you mean R20? I don't see R27.
I did indeed.
> I think the only way forward with this circuit would be to build and test it.
Agreed.
> I'd do a first prototype with everything through hole except LT1679 and NSS40301MDR2G.
Why?
> I'd also put four more resistors in series with each 68k (maybe reduce them to 56k) for the four diodes so I can make the current pulses in the four diodes exactly equal.
Why? I can see an argument for removing all the 68k resistors so the current being fed through R11 is as high as possible, with the smallest possible ripple. There is a risk that the diode current will turn off fast enough to drive them into snap-recovery, but it is remote.
Increasing the 68k resisitors reduces the effect of the tolerance on the forward voltage drop through each diode, but choosing diodes with a closer tolerance on the forward voltage drop would be a better way to go. The 1N914 doesn't seem to have one at all.
The Infineon-BAS3007ASERIES diodes at least specify 350mV typical and 400mV max at 100mA. I think NExperia had something better back when it was Philips, but that's a long time ago.
> And add a capacitor (100n min) to ground where the resistors join.
Adding more phase delay along the feedback path and make the settling time even longer.
> And use the remaining LT4167 (two quad packs) as an output buffer so that whatever is connected to the output doesn't disturb the
> operation of D10.
What D10?
-- Bill Sloman, Sydney