Without having a shielded cable the input wire will pickup a lot of mains hum and other interference.the cable isnt shielded
Without having a shielded cable the input wire will pickup a lot of mains hum and other interference.the cable isnt shielded
i know, hence the filters <500hz, i've got to try and build something...Without having a shielded cable the input wire will pickup a lot of mains hum and other interference.
thanks Skeebopstop, this is a great help, but....I've attached a nice active low pass filter differential amplifier circuit. It has -6dB per decade, not as great as some of the heavier duty active filters, but it wins points for amplifying and filtering at the same time.
R4 = R2
R3 = R1
Gain = R2/R1.
Bandwidth = 1/2*pi*R2*C2.
Just chain this up with another such circuit, where the first one is set to 500Hz and the next one 3000 Hz.
You can use the diff amps along the way for your amplification (if you need much power you'll have to buffer the output).
If you are driving a class A output stage and only have a +5V supply for the opamps, you can adjust the GND to be Vcc/2 and it will amplify around that as a midpoint.
Please note I just inserted some random op-amp in my schematic capture, so select an op-amp suited to your application.
Depends on what you need of it. What is the range of your input signal? do you have a dual supply or single ended to power the opamp? Were you looking to only power a weak signal (i.e. headphones)? are you doing Class A, B, or AB type amplifier?
to implement easiest, Class A, use single ended 24v supply and bias a +-10V maximum output around 12V. At which point, if your application doesn't need to be horribly exact and only drives 30mA or so, just use the provided circuit.