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On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 17:10:41 -0500, "Steve Nosko"
wrote: This could be viewed as what we call a "clamper circuit" The AC voltage AT THE BASE will have its positive peak "clamped" or moved to +0.7 volts and the waveform will extend from there as negative as the waveform is tall. IF we had 5 volts peak (10 volts peak-to-peak) the cap left side, the base voltage will swing from +0.7 volts to -9.3 volts. Okay, upon further thought about this there's still something amiss in my understanding. I take what you say about the cap blocking out the DC component of the waveform to leave the AC largely unaffected. However, the term "clamping" AIUI means the diode lops off anything over about 0.7 volts from the input waveform (ie, it conducts it away to ground) so around half of it is lost (half wave rectification). Now you state (and the spice progs agree) that what *actually* happens in this case is that the whole AC waveform gets shifted south into negative territory. It's still a full wave, but it's way down into the negative and only the highest peaks just creep above zero volts. Is this effect *solely* attributable to the steady build-up of negative charge on the cap's RHS? I think what's really freaking me out here is the fact that the signal source is grounded on the neg. side and yet we have that same signal that after going through a cap can end up going fully negative *below* ground. It just seems like any such voltage beneath zero/ground potential is breaking the laws of physics. Ground should be the 'absolute zero' of the potentials in any circuit and here it is being violated. I need some help to get my thick head around the concept! :-( -- Fat, sugar, salt, beer: the four essentials for a healthy diet. |