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Hoffman Amps Forum image Author Topic: attenuator question  (Read 4631 times)

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Offline antieatingactivist

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attenuator question
« on: November 26, 2009, 11:36:19 pm »


I'm looking at the "simple" schematic at the bottom, I'm not quite sure how this circuit works.

From what i've figured out, if the pot is turned all the way down, it is putting a 6 ohm load (8 ohm and 25 ohm in parallel) on the amp and shorting the speaker out of the circuit.

When it is turned all the way up, it looks like it is putting the 8 ohm speaker into a series with the 25 ohm pot.

This looks like an easy thing to build, and I could incorporate it into the dummy load that I've already built. I just don't really get it.


Offline tubesornothing

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Re: attenuator question
« Reply #1 on: November 26, 2009, 11:49:53 pm »
From what i've figured out, if the pot is turned all the way down, it is putting a 6 ohm load (8 ohm and 25 ohm in parallel) on the amp and shorting the speaker out of the circuit.
When it is turned all the way up, it looks like it is putting the 8 ohm speaker into a series with the 25 ohm pot.

Sounds like you have it figured out just fine to me.

Offline antieatingactivist

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Re: attenuator question
« Reply #2 on: November 27, 2009, 12:14:04 am »

When it is turned all the way up, it looks like it is putting the 8 ohm speaker into a series with the 25 ohm pot.


wouldn't that be a 33 ohms? that is what I don't get

Offline HotBluePlates

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Re: attenuator question
« Reply #3 on: November 27, 2009, 02:07:10 am »
From what i've figured out, if the pot is turned all the way down, it is putting a 6 ohm load (8 ohm and 25 ohm in parallel) on the amp and shorting the speaker out of the circuit.

We should follow all the paths to figure it out.

Turned all the way down, there is no voltage between the wire shown going to the speaker and ground. In other words, there are 2 wires for the speaker, and both are connected to ground, so there's no sound out of the speaker.

Since the speaker is effectively out of the circuit, the impedance seen by the amp is, as you said, 8 ohms ll 25 ohms = ~6 ohms.

When it is turned all the way up, it looks like it is putting the 8 ohm speaker into a series with the 25 ohm pot.

Not quite.

Let's assume the speaker is 8 ohms, just to have a number to work with. The 8 ohm speaker is in parallel with the 25 ohm pot, and the 8 ohm resistor is effectived shorted by the wire that connects from the "top of the resistor" to "the top of the pot." In this setting, the amp still sees 8 ohms in parallel with 25 ohms, or ~6 ohms.

What happens when the pot is set halfway? We don't know if this is a linear-taper pot or an audio taper pot. Let's assume linear for ease of guessing.

If you set a linear 25 ohm pot to half of its mechanical rotation, it has the wiper at half its electrical length, or resistance. So that's 12.5 ohms above the wiper and 12.5 ohms below the wiper.

The 12.5 ohms above the wiper is in parallel with the 8 ohm resistor, and the 12.5 ohms below the wiper is in parallel with the 8 ohm speaker. These 2 parallel circuits are in series. 12.5 ohms ll 8 ohms = 4.89 ohms, so 4.89 in series with 4.89 = ~9.8 ohms.

So this circuit provides a nearly-constant load to the amp. In fairness, a perfectly constant load would take more resistors and a more tricky (read as "expensive") wiring scheme; also, a loudspeaker present a less constant load to the amp than this attenuator does.

Offline antieatingactivist

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Re: attenuator question
« Reply #4 on: November 27, 2009, 11:53:12 am »
I get it now. Thank you for the explanation.

Offline PRR

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Re: attenuator question
« Reply #5 on: November 27, 2009, 01:06:44 pm »
> it looks like it is putting the 8 ohm speaker into a series with the 25 ohm pot.

Parallel.

> Let's assume linear for ease of guessing.

There are no 200 Watt taper-pots. (Or not that you are likely to find.)

Offline HotBluePlates

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Re: attenuator question
« Reply #6 on: November 27, 2009, 11:09:15 pm »
There are no 200 Watt taper-pots. (Or not that you are likely to find.)

Yeah, I guess they'd have to be wirewound, and the wire is likely to be constant resistance per unit of length, so linear taper in the final product.

 


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