... the Anti-Feedback circuit as a series of linked RC filters, however they also incorporate a 900mH choke? Can someone who knows what the heck we are looking at take a look and esplain it in plain English to me?
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The A, B and C anti-feedback filters are series RL resonant circuits. The L has a rising reactance/impedance for rising frequency, and the C has a rising reactance/impedance for lowering frequency. There is a resonant frequency where their reactance/impedance is the same, and is a minimum overall for the series circuit.
You see these filters A, B and C ultimately go from collector to ground, so they are there to reduce the strength of some band of frequency. You calculate the resonant frequency with the equation on the bottom of the attached picture.
For resonance, I calculate A as centered on ~4.3kHz, B on ~2kHz, and C on 923Hz (likely intended to be ~1kHz). To switch these out, a 220kΩ is in series with each filter to isolate them from the collector output. When they are switched in, the switch shorts the 220kΩ resistor and places a 10kΩ resistor in series between the collector output & filter to ground.
Filter D is a parallel resonant filter, made of 25uF and a 900mH inductor. For parallel resonance, the circuit impedance is at a maximum at resonance and equal to the resistance in parallel with the L & C (10kΩ in this case). Because this filter is in the emitter circuit, the increase of emitter resistance to 10kΩ plus the fixed 470Ω notches out gain. For 25uF & 900mH, this happens at ~33Hz, and is probably a pretty broad notch. When switch out, the switch shorts a 33kΩ to bring 6x (!) 50uF caps in parallel with the rest of the circuit. This lowers the resonance to ~9Hz, well below audio range.