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"james" wrote...
Let me be sure that I understand what you are saying. If you are having trouble with my English, try these... (Full book titles, authors and ISBN numbers at bottom) quote ref=Electronics For Engineers, page 11 Amplification This essential process involves an increase in the amplitude or size of a signal without any change to the waveform. /quote quote ref=Electronics 2, page 114 the input and output will have the same waveshape. /quote quote ref=Electronics Servicing Vol2, page 61 we ideally require the output signal to be a faithful but magnified replica of the input signal. quote If that is your position then that is utter bovine, canine, feline and any other *ine excrement you wish to use. Tell it to the authors of those books, but you had best consider their qualifications and experience first. The only way the output waveform is equal to the input waveform is when the stage is at unity gain I have the choice of accepting the word of several well qualified and experienced lecturers and engineers, or someone on a CB newsgroup. Tough call... can I think about it? period. 1/f A waveform of any continuous time varying signal is defined as a set of intantaineous points versus time that represent that signal. At the input of an amplifier, you have a single frequency signal... 10mV @ 1Khz The waveform is... sin 2pi f t The signal at the output is amplified... 100mV @1KHz The waveform should now be sin 2pi f t That is assuming a perfectly linear amplifier. We both agree that perfection doesn't exists in this world. Transistors are not perfectly linear but, with good design, an amplifier can get pretty damn close. Generally distortion results in harmonics and other highfrequency components of the signal. Distortion of a waveform will add components at other frequencies. Pure amplification is not a distortion, it does not add any extra frequency components to the signal and does not change the waveform. +++The question is whether "Telstar" and "well designed" go together. +++I would like to see an independent review from someone without +++an axe to grind. ************ Now that will depend on examination of the product. That was the whole idea, it was also the suggestion that Frank made... only I find it hard to believe he would be objective. He appears to have issues with Brian. Regards, Peter. Book references (author quals. as at print dates) Electronics 2, D. C. Green MTech, CEng, MIEE (Engineer for BT and Ministry of Defence, Senior Lecturer at Willesden College of Technology). Longman Scientific & Technical ISBN 0-582-24519-2 Electronics For Engineers. R. J. Maddock (Former principle lecturer, Southampton Institute of Higher Education) D. M. Calcutt (Senior Lecturer, School of Systems Engineering, University of Portsmouth). Longman Scientific & Technical. (UK) ISBN 0-582-21583-8 Electronics servicing Vol 2 K. J. Bohlman. I.Eng, F.S.E.R.T, A.M.Inst.E. (Senior Lecturer, North Lincolnshire College) Dickson Price Publishers Ltd. (UK) ISBN 0 85380 191-6 (C&G 224 core studies reference) |
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