Thursday, July 29, 2010
100W Audio Amplifier
- Clean the component leads with a small piece of emery paper. - Bend them at the correct distance from the component body and insert the component in its place on the board.
- You may find sometimes a component with heavier gauge leads than usual, that are too thick to enter in the holes of the p.c. board. In this case use a mini drill to enlarge the holes slightly. Do not make the holes too large as this is going to make soldering difficult afterwards.
- Take the hot iron and place its tip on the component lead while holding the end of the solder wire at the point where the lead emerges from the board. The iron tip must touch the lead slightly above the p.c. board.
- When the solder starts to melt and flow, wait till it covers evenly the area around the hole and the flux boils and gets out from underneath the solder. The whole operation should not take more than 5 seconds. Remove the iron and leave the solder to cool naturally without blowing on it or moving the component. If everything was done properly the surface of the joint must have a bright metallic finish and its edges should be smoothly ended on the component lead and the board track. If the solder looks dull, cracked, or has the shape of a blob then you have made a dry joint and you should remove the solder (with a pump, or a solder wick) and redo it.
- Take care not to overheat the tracks as it is very easy to lift them from the board and break them.
- When you are soldering a sensitive component it is good practice to hold the lead from the component side of the board with a pair of long-nose pliers to divert any heat that could possibly damage the component.
- Make sure that you do not use more solder than it is necessary as you are running the risk of short-circuiting adjacent tracks on the board, especially if they are very close together.
- When you finish your work cut off the excess of the component leads and clean the board thoroughly with a suitable solvent to remove all flux residues that still remain on it.
- See that there are no components missing or inserted in the wrong places.
- Make sure that all the polarised components have been soldered the right way round. - Make sure the supply has the correct voltage and is connected the right way round to your circuit.
- Check your project for faulty or damaged components. If everything checks and your project still fails to work, please contact your retailer and the Smart Kit Service will repair it for you.
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
1V, Low-Power, Stereo Headphone Amplifier with Shutdown (MAX9725)
The MAX9725A–MAX9725D fixed-gain, stereo headphone amplifiers are ideal for portable equipment where board space is at a premium. The MAX9725E offers the flexibility to adjust the gain with external input and feedback resistors. The MAX9725A–MAX9725E use a unique DirectDrive® architecture to produce a ground-referenced output from a single supply, eliminating the need for large DC-blocking capacitors, saving cost, board space, and component height. Fixed gains of -2V/V (MAX9725A), -1.5V/V (MAX9725B), -1V/V (MAX9725C), and -4V/V (MAX9725D) further reduce external component count. The adjustable gain of the MAX9725E DirectDrive headphone amplifier allows for any gain down to -1V/V using external resistors.
The MAX9725 delivers up to 20mW per channel into a 32Ω load and achieves 0.006% THD+N. An 80dB at 1kHz power-supply rejection ratio (PSRR) allows the MAX9725 to operate from noisy digital supplies without an additional linear regulator. The MAX9725 includes ±8kV ESD protection on the headphone output. Comprehensive click-and-pop circuitry suppresses audible clicks and pops at startup and shutdown. A low-power shutdown mode reduces supply current to 0.6µA (typ).
The MAX9725 operates from a single 0.9V to 1.8V supply, allowing the device to be powered directly from a single AA or AAA battery. The MAX9725 consumes only 2.1mA of supply current, provides short-circuit protection, and is specified over the extended
Sunday, June 27, 2010
Amplifier 250-500W with transistors MJ15003.
General Specifications
Rated Power Output
(20Hz to 20kHz Continuous Average Sine Wave)
250 watts into 8 ohms
500 watts into 4 ohms
Power Bandwidth
(250 watts into 8 ohms)
20Hz to 40kHz (0dB to -3dB)
Frequency Response
1 watt into 8 ohms
20Hz to 100kHz (0dB to -1.0 dB)
250 watts into 8 ohms
20Hz to 20kHz (Flat)
Input Sensitivity
+3 dBV
(1.4V RMS produces an output of 350 watts into 8 ohms)
Input Impedance
33K ohms, Unbalanced
Rise Time
2.0 microSeconds
Total Harmonic Distortion (THD)
Full Power(250 watts into 8 ohms)
Less than 0.007 % THD @ 1kHz
Less than 0.08 % THD @ 20Hz to 20kHz
Half Power (125 watts into 8 ohms)
Less than 0.003 % THD @ 1kHz
Less than 0.03 % THD @ 20Hz to 20kHz
10 watts into 8 ohms
Less than 0.003 % THD @ 1kHz
Less than 0.01 % THD @ 20Hz to 20kHz
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
FM Stereo Transmitter ( BH1415F )
Sunday, June 13, 2010
240VAC TO 5VDC POWER SUPPLY
This is simple way to power some 5v logic from a 240vac source. If a 120vac power adapter is used, the circuit will also work for 120vac power lines.





