Wolframore
- Joined Jan 21, 2019
- 2,619
I believe the 741 is just acting as a preamp for another unit.
It should but the TS was driving the speaker directly from the output of the 741 from his description in post #1I believe the 741 is just acting as a preamp for another unit.
Yes, it is from an old early Technics surround sound BIG stereo system. It was the shelf sized rear speaker and has great audio out. Normally my Echo/Alexa goes into a pair of powered Bose desktop speakers that are independent from my computer which has some Altec Lansing speakers with a big subwoofer that my wife hates.a plain old 8 ohm voice coil speaker
This is a lab exercise and it is part of the instructions for it to put the filter in and hear if it makes any difference. I can hear down to ~10hZ and this cuts off below ~1300hZ. My high end on my ears, primarily my left ear, quits around 8kHz and above. This thing was oscillating at one point and the wife came in to see what the racket was. I couldn't hear it but could see the oscillation on the scope...Why add a lowpass filter that cuts all intelligible sounds?
I actually measured the cutoff and with the components used it is ~1300hZ and that is a lo pass and I hear fine in that range. The problem I had was when I plugged the speaker into the circuit it flatlined, complete attenuation. Without the speaker, it looked fine on the scope and with the speaker plugged in before the filter it sounded fine. The resistor in the filter I guess was the "straw that broke the camel's back" in a sense.your filter has cutoff of 1/ωRC or or about 995 Hz
I have some and they are certainly a LOT quieter than the 741. One reason I used the "required" 741 the exercise called for was I was curious as to what the null deal was with the 741 so I was playing around with that also. I assume later model op amps don't need to be nulled?The NE5532 is a reasonable low-cost op-amp for audio.
The previous lab exercises did just that. One exercise building using the preamp with a microphone. One exercise building active lo, hi, and bandpass filters and recording/plotting their outputs as the input frequency and voltage varied. The power amp is out of the blue and has not been covered at all so far in the book. I do have some experience using the LM386 though and have a few other model 2-5W amplifier chips. This was the first exercise connecting it to a music source. I assume the "power amplifier" was a piece of supplied lab equipment as it is only shown as a block diagram and there is no schematic for it other than wiring connections to it. Since I was able to drive a speaker without it previously I didn't need it before now.You're trying too many things at the same time:
1) preamp
2) filter
3) power amp
Do try thing at a time.
Do you have a music source?
Do you have a computer powered amplifier?
Start by connecting the music source to the amplifier. Do you get decent sound output?
No, it was just part of the exercise. I have used op amp voltage followers/buffers to remove EMI on low voltage scope inputs but then there is noise generated inherently in the 741 and other opamps.Did you use your lowpass filter cutoff frequency at 1100hz to cut hiss from the noisy 741 opamp?