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Mad Scientist Jr wrote:
If this amp powered by a battery? A 9V battery, although I plugged a 200 mA 9V AC adapter into it and it worked also, though I didn't leave it plugged in that long - maybe if it was in longer it would have fried it. I'm not sure how many mA would be unsafe for this circuit - I looked up 9V batteries to see what the current typically is, but it seems this depends on the circuit. Until I find this out I'll probably just use a 9V "battery eliminator" AC adapter. The reason I asked is that a battery eliminator will probably have some hum in its output, and pin 7 is there to remove most of that interference from getting into the amplifier. See the data sheet for the LM386: http://web.mit.edu/6.115/www/datasheets/LM386.pdf The supply voltage enters the input to bias the output at half of the supply voltage, going past pin 7, which is usually bypassed to ground by 10 uF or more to smooth the bias current from the supply. Even with a battery supply, the voltage will bounce around a little from the current drawn by the output transistors, and bypassing pin 7 helps reduce that effect, too. In this configuration, pin 2 is the most sensitive node, and anything connected to it should be surrounded with shielding. I think I'll start with this. Thanks for your detailed input! ! Good luck. |
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