Got a very simple question. I'm going through an Electronics book (Make Electronics).
The project I'm on is an PUT driven oscillator and the first version of it is here:
http://examples.oreilly.com/9780596153755-files/mkel_02/mkel_02_108.pdf
The drawing actually has two circuits on it. Ignore the top one (with a 2.2 microfarad capacitor) and please look at at the second one (the one with a 0.0047 capacitor).
As you can see the output of the PUT is fed through a 1K resistor into the base of a transistor (2222N I think). This I do get because the output from the PUT will be relatively low and the transistor will "amplify" that signal.
If however you look at this version of the schematic:
http://examples.oreilly.com/9780596153755-files/mkel_02/mkel_02_114.pdf
You will see that the output of the first transistor is fed into the base of another transistor to "amplify" the signal further.
What I don't get is: why not just manage with one transistor because there's only one power supply and the maximum current we will get will be 6V divided by the resistance. Why add another transistor and not just lessen the resistance of the output of PUT?
I.e., couldn't I just replace the 1K resistor on the output of the PUT with a 100 Oms resistor?
Why have 2 or 3 or 5 stages of amplification at all - especially if the max we can get is 6V or whatever the power supply can provide?
I'm a total newbie. So bear with me.
The project I'm on is an PUT driven oscillator and the first version of it is here:
http://examples.oreilly.com/9780596153755-files/mkel_02/mkel_02_108.pdf
The drawing actually has two circuits on it. Ignore the top one (with a 2.2 microfarad capacitor) and please look at at the second one (the one with a 0.0047 capacitor).
As you can see the output of the PUT is fed through a 1K resistor into the base of a transistor (2222N I think). This I do get because the output from the PUT will be relatively low and the transistor will "amplify" that signal.
If however you look at this version of the schematic:
http://examples.oreilly.com/9780596153755-files/mkel_02/mkel_02_114.pdf
You will see that the output of the first transistor is fed into the base of another transistor to "amplify" the signal further.
What I don't get is: why not just manage with one transistor because there's only one power supply and the maximum current we will get will be 6V divided by the resistance. Why add another transistor and not just lessen the resistance of the output of PUT?
I.e., couldn't I just replace the 1K resistor on the output of the PUT with a 100 Oms resistor?
Why have 2 or 3 or 5 stages of amplification at all - especially if the max we can get is 6V or whatever the power supply can provide?
I'm a total newbie. So bear with me.