Showing posts with label preamplifier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label preamplifier. Show all posts

Monday, October 27, 2014

Lm318 Microphone preamplifier with tone control Diagram Circuit

This electronic project is a simple microphone preamplifier based on the LM318 op amp . The LM318 op amp is operated as a standard non-inverting amplifier. Resistor R1 provides an input path to ground for the bias current of the non-inverting input. The combination of R2 and C2 provides a frequency roll-off below 30 Hz. At 30 Hz and above the gain is relatively flat at about 50 dB, set by the ratio R3/R2. R3 furnishes negative feedback from the output to the inverting input of the op amp. C3 ac couples the preamp to the tone control section.
The top half of the tone control section is the bass control. The bottom half controls the treble frequency response. These tone controls (R5 and R8) require audio taper (logarithmic) potentiometers. The 50 k ohm potentiometer on the output can be used to set the output or gain of the preamp .

The circuit is very simple and require few electronic parts . This microphone preamplifier electronic project must be powered from a dual 15 volt DC power supply .
If you don’t want to use tone control function for the microphone preamplifier you can eliminate the tone control part from the project .
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Thursday, August 21, 2014

Mic Preamplifier Circuit based TLC251

Here the schematic diagram of mic preamplifier which build based on operational amplifier TC251. The TLC251 is operating in low bias. The schema works with only 1.5 V supply draws electric current of only 10 mA, so the battery operation will be prefered. Circuit frequency response is 3dB, 27 Hz to 4.8 kHz.

Mic


Frequency Response:

Frequency

The TLC251 are low-cost, low-power programmable operational amplifiers designed to operate with single or dual power supplies. Because the input common-mode range extends to the negative rail and the power consumption is very low, this chip is ideally suited for battery-powered or energy-conserving applications. A bias-select pin can be used to program one of three ac performance and power-dissipation levels to suit the application. The series features operation down to a 1.4V supply and is stable at unity gain.

Download the TLC251 datasheet document from the following link:
» Download link
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