Been reading about preamp output impedance and how to measure it.
Measured it two ways. One way gives me 33 ohms impedance using the calculation.
The other way was to use a resistor decade box to exactly half the unloaded voltage seen on the scope. Unloaded the peak to peak was 4 volts. Loaded at 2 volts, the resistor decade box says 38 ohms. I am using the built in peak to peak voltage measurement function on this new scope to measure voltage.
So, a average of 35 ohms impedance on the output of my modded PL2000 S2. From what I've been reading, this seems rather low. Low appears to be good from what I've read, just surprised it's so low.
I verified the resistor box reading with both Flukes. It's accurate.
Watched two YouTube videos on doing this.
Using the simplest measurement scheme, of halfing the the unloaded voltage with a load on the decade box. At 50 Hz the impedance is 386 ohms. At 500 Hz the impedance is 38 ohms. Interesting how the factor of 10 appears.
Time to do some more reading.
Joe, O.K., so increase capacitance value to improve low frequency performance.
PL had two 2.2 uF electrolytics in series + to + on each output trace to create a bipolar.
Per the photograph of the old test board, a jumper replaced one cap and a 4.7 uF film the other old cap. This is how both working preamps are configured.
What should I study to figure out the optimum value for the output coupling caps. I'm at a loss for terminology and thinking I'm approaching the need of a good spectrum analyzer once again.
J!m,
From my perspective, Gepetto has proven by his words & his actions to definitely be one of The Elders.
Cheers --
Thanks Joe. I'm going to have to reread this several times and think about it to understand. I see I need to read up on capacitors and their effect on frequency. Thank you!Hi George
The good news is that the move to the single 4.7uF has improved the situation ~5 fold from the original (1.1uF to 4.7uF)
You have to consider what you are driving, the PL amp input load with a RevG1. You indicated the measured impedance is 386 ohms at 50Hz which makes total sense given what you measured a decade above that at 500 Hz. Lets assume 25 Hz, your measured impedance should be somewhere around 772 ohms. Lets use that number. This means that your amp output at 25 Hz will be down approximately 1.5% from and equivalent signal at 500 Hz. Not huge but something.
Compare that to the original back to back 2.2uF situation and your 25 Hz signal would have been down ~6%. You have improved the situation significantly.
Thanks Joe. I'm going to have to reread this several times and think about it to understand. I see I need to read up on capacitors and their effect on frequency. Thank you!
I suspect it existed Mark but PL did not want to pay the freight for film caps of that size/value.Joe, I installed the two TDK 22uF film output caps and wire jumpers in my PL2000 and the preamplifier sounds better than it ever has. I am quite sure the technology to create a 22uF film cap with 25mm lead spacing did not exist in 1979.
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