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AUDIO
OUT
AUDIO OUT
L
R
By Jake Rothman
Microphone Preamplifier (for Vocoder) – Part 4
The Microphone Preamplifier board, as completed in last month’s column.
L
ast month, we looked at
Adding transformers
be needed. These are readily available
from Vigortronix in all sizes. Another
bonus is that the phantom power could
also then be fed via a centre-tap, rather
than 6.8kΩ resistors.
A further reason transformers can
sound better is because there is less voltage drop on the 48V microphone supply
due to their lower series DC resistance
of around 30Ω. The voltage to many
One preamplifier mod it’s often worth
doing in electrically noisy environments
(such as near lighting rigs), is to add an
input transformer to the already balanced
input shown in Fig.14 (see Part 2 in Audio Out, June 2021). This significantly
increases the CMRR to top-class levels.
Also, the CMRR of solid-state inputs is
strictly limited to around 5V or whatever level causes the input amps to clip. A
transformer, however, can tolerate around
100V common-mode voltage. This double-balancing technique was employed by
S. Groner in his microphone-preamplifier
in the March 2015 issue of the Journal of
the Acoustic Engineering Society (JAES).
A 600Ω 1:1 line-level transformer is much
cheaper than a step-up microphone transformer. However, a mu-metal screening
can to avoid hum pick-up would also
Fig.37. The distortion curve of the output transformer at 7V peak-to-peak feeding 600Ω.
Note the typical rise at low frequencies. This is emphasised because the transformer is
being slightly over-driven at this level.
building and testing the Microphone
Preamplifier. This month, we
conclude with some modifications and
design options. A project like this is never
truly ‘finished’ – there’s always room for
additions and improvements, but you
have to draw line at some point!
46
microphones can drop to as low as 35V
due to the 6.8kΩ resistors.
Output transformer
Output transformers offer the unique
property of earth isolation, the floating
output prevents earth loops however they
are connected, even if one side of the balanced output is grounded. (This is the
case when feeding unbalanced inputs.)
Practical Electronics | August | 2021
D ri ve r a m pl i f i er
O utput
tra ns f orm er
pri m a ry
Input
R
P r1
( posi ti ve
resi s ta nce)
n
Neg a ti ve output resi st a nce
( – R P r 1 ) g enera tor – ca ncel s
th e pri m a ry resi st a nce
0 V
All transformers produce a rising distortion as the frequency gets lower, similar
to acoustic instruments, magnetic tape,
capacitors and loudspeakers. Transformer distortion harmonics tend to be mainly
third order plus a bit of second order. Solid-state electronics such as op amps, class
AB power amps and digital-to-analogue
converters all have the opposite effect,
higher-order distortion rising with frequency. Some audio people think these
two characteristics complement each
other, which is why one finds expensive
gold-plated silver-wound transformers installed in expensive digital Hi-Fi systems.
There is also a huge demand for class-A
Neve-style transformer-coupled preamplifiers, such as the 1073.
I take the view that – within reason
– low-order harmonic distortion is enhancing on simple audio signals, such
as a solo voice and drums, but bad on
complex mixes of signals, for example
piano and choral music. This is because
dissonant intermodulation products arise
with multiple tones on systems with high
THD. I’ve decided to offer a choice here,
normal transformer distortion of about
1% at 20Hz (shown in Fig.37) or a special
distortion-cancelling circuit built around
IC2b, which lowers LF distortion to around
0.02%, as shown in Fig.38.
Distortion minimisation circuit
Practical Electronics | August | 2021
Input
Zob el
netw ork
IC 2 a
5 5 3 2
330Ω
O utput
2 2 nF
–
R 2 7
10Ω
IC 2 b
5 5 3 2
Lund a h l LL1 5 1 7
DC resistance = 19Ω
P ri m a ri es i n se ri es
Second a ri es i n se ri es
+
R 2 6
1.2kΩ
C 1 5
4 7 µ F
+
The BBC originally used huge expensive
transformers with 80% nickel 20% iron
cores for their own in-house-built equipment, as shown in Fig.39 This was very
effective in minimising distortion. When
sound mixers began to be bought in from
private industry, enterprising engineers
developed circuit tricks to get the same
performance using cheaper components.
Most involved negative feedback from an
extra winding, such as some Neve designs.
Another method was developed so that ordinary off-the-shelf transformers could be
used. It was well known that transformers
gave less distortion when driven from zero
source impedance. This was because the
current drawn by a transformer is distorted
because of the hysteresis and saturation
effects of the iron core. The saturation effect gets worse as the frequency decreases,
since there is more magnetic energy to
store for each cycle, accounting for the
low-frequency rise. Despite these tricks it
is worth noting that some residual distortion is still developed because of the series
resistance of the primary
wiring, even if driven from
a zero-ohm output. Then
some bright spark figured
that if this resistance could
be cancelled out by a negative resistance, distortion
should be eliminated, as
shown in Fig.40.
A circuit developed by
Calrec in conjunction with
Swedish transformer maker Lundahl is shown in
Fig.41. The lower op amp
IC2b is the negative-resistance generator. It works
by developing a voltage
Fig.39. Heft rather than feedback – the BBC used to
in anti-phase to the curuse conventionally driven large (43mm high) nickel-core
rent flow by using a sense
transformers to get low distortion.
resistor (R27). If a current goes into the
upper end of the sense resistor the voltage developed across it goes down rather
than up, as shown in Fig.42. It should be
noted this circuit uses a degree of positive
feedback and if the negative resistance
exceeds the resistance of the primary,
the circuit will oscillate. The amount of
positive feedback is set by the lower-arm
feedback resistor (R25), and this should
be adjusted to suit the transformer used.
The original Calrec circuit used 2kΩ with
a Lundahl LL1517 transformer, which is
now very expensive. I use the Vigortronix
49% Ni core VTX 101-3001 with R25 set
to 3.9kΩ. Another source of distortion is
ground currents. By feeding the transformer
return current into the output of IC2b, it is
conveniently diverted to the power rails.
To achieve the lowest distortion, always
drive a transformer directly from the output
of the drive amplifier using DC coupling.
Adding a coupling capacitor causes the
LF distortion to rise again because of the
–
Transformer distortion
Fig.40. Basic principle of reducing the
transformer distortion. The negative
resistance cancels out the transformer’s
primary DC resistance.
+
Fig.38. The effect of the negative-resistance distortion-reduction circuit (Fig.42). Same
conditions as in Fig.37, but with an almost 10-times reduction in distortion.
R 2 5
2.0kΩ
0 V
Fig.41. The distortion-reduction circuit
used on late 1980s Calrec broadcast
desks using a Lundahl output transformer.
47
V+
1 N4 0 0 1
+
Input
+
IC 2 a
2kΩ
V–
R sense
R 2 7
10Ω
–
1 N4 0 0 1
–
IC 2 b
1 N4 0 0 1
0 V
1
+
M eta l
w ork
1kΩ
r
n
1 0 nF
it
V–
t t
ta e r
rti na t
trans r er ri ar c rrent
t
anti ase c
are t C2a
+
R 2 6
1.2kΩ
2
0 V
+
F
8 . 2 nF
a ance
t t s cket
e terna ie
Vi g ortroni x
101 3001
–
R
3
30Ω DC
resi st a nce
V+
R 2 5
3.9kΩ
Zob el
netw ork
1 N4 0 0 1
O pti ona l
cl a m p
d i od es
Neg a ti ve
resi st a nce
g enera tor
an arti icia
g round
–
DC
ckin
C 1 5
3 3 0 µ F C a pa ci tor
6 .3 V
T a nta l um
Fig.42. The
negative
resistance is
developed by
producing an
anti-phase
voltage drop
from the current
passing though
sense resistor
R27. The effect
is boosted
by positive
feedback
network R26
and R25. DC
has to be
blocked by C15
to prevent the
op amp going
off-set.
siti e ee ack net rk ee s t e
ta e e e e
acr ss 2 int C2 s n n in ertin in t an
sts it
s icient t
ake t t resistance ne ati e
capacitor’s reactance, as shown in Fig.43.
One problem with driving transformers
directly is the low DC resistance of the
winding, which can give rise to high fault
currents if an offset voltage develops. The
5532 seems to be able to survive such
situations, but its dissipation rating maybe exceeded in the worst-case situation
where both op amp outputs are latched
to opposite power rails. It’s a worthwhile
safety precaution to add clamping diodes
(shown dotted in Fig.42) from the outputs
to the rails to deal with possible voltage
spikes caused by the transformer driving
faulty leads.
Capacitor distortion
In Rupert Neve’s obituary (JAES, March
2021), Malcolm Atkin, MD of Audio Consultants Ltd, recalled Neve describing
what caused the unique sound quality of his mixing console installed at Sir
George Martin’s Air recording studios in
Montserrat. He said it was not just down
to the transformers, but tantalum capacitors. Using tantalum capacitors for signal
coupling (especially when unbiased and
driving low impedances) gives a similar
low-frequency distortion rise to transformers. Fig.44 shows this capacitor distortion
on the microphone-preamplifier. Ordinary
wet aluminium electrolytics also make
this distortion, but around five times less.
Going bipolar
Fig.43. The output transformer has to be directly driven / DC coupled. Adding a 47µF
bi-polar capacitor in series with the output of IC2a spoilt the distortion cancelling effect.
I found enclosing this capacitor in a negative-feedback loop around IC2a eliminated
the distortion, but then caused low-frequency ringing around a few hertz. Negative
resistance is a good way of making an oscillator. This is a work in progress.
Fig.44. Distortion effect of a single 100µF 20V tantalum capacitor driving 13.6Vpk-pk into
600Ω unbalanced output (ie, no transformer). It is reverse polarised each cycle, the voltage
increasing as the frequency decreases, causing a rise in distortion at low frequencies. It is
unlikely the capacitor will normally be driven at this level.
48
Bipolar wet aluminium electrolytics are
almost distortion free and provide full
protection from hard offsets of either polarity. This approach was used by Clive
Green in his Cadac mixers used in most
West End theatres. Connecting two polarised capacitors back-to-back effectively
makes a bipolar capacitor, but some distortion is still present. To eliminate this, a
few volts of bias at the junction is needed.
Inactivity can kill
One problem little known about these wet
bipolar capacitors is their short shelf life.
Fig.45. Bipolar electrolytic capacitors
have negligible distortion, but they can
degrade if not used. All of these Suntan
capacitors almost exploded in storage.
Practical Electronics | August | 2021
Fig.46. The Hitano capacitor brand
was no better than Suntan in terms of
component degradation.
I’ve just dumped a load of Suntan capacitors from Rapid and some Hitano types
from JPR which exploded in storage after a few years. When I complained, they
pointed out the data sheet specified they
need a polarity reversal every 250 hours.
Those from Nichicon and Panasonic have
the same requirements. They have to be
used or they die – see the photos in Fig.45.
and Fig. 46. A sensible check is to measure the capacitance. If it has markedly
risen from its stated value then it’s a sign
that the rot has already started, and the
dielectric film is thinning. One manufacturer whose products do not suffer from
this defect is the yellow Nitai type shown
in Fig.47.
The Midas touch
The clever way round this problem is
a technique developed by Midas who
made the mixers and sound systems used
by Pink Floyd. Aged 13, I remember being taken to their factory near Euston in
1975 by my uncle who worked there as
a test engineer. I saw the best audio design, construction and components. They
C 1
6 .8 µ F *
* P l a st i c f i l m
H i g h - pa s
O n
F rom
i nput
D C
f i l ter
O n
T oT R 1 /2
b a se s of
P rea m p
D a m pi ng
1 .2 H
12 Ω
resi st a nce
C 2
6 .8 µ F *
R D
0Ω
Fig.50. A high-pass filter can be placed
directly on the input to the preamplifier. For
better headroom, remove low-frequency
signal rubbish before amplification.
had Bourns conductive plastic pots and
Philips TDA1034 op amps, (later renamed
the NE5534) before anyone else. A quirk of
the 5534 is that sinking a small current into
the output of the 5534 reduces its distortion. The engineers at Midas (who I suspect
discovered this technique) also combined
it with a bipolar capacitor biasing circuit,
as shown in Fig.48. This worked wonders
with tantalum capacitors. The resulting
curve is shown in Fig.49. We now have a
virtually distortionless coupling capacitor that lasts a lifetime. One of the Midas
desks is now in the UK’s National Science
and Media Museum’s mixer collection.
Low-cut filter
Fig.47. These yellow Nitai capacitors gave no storage degradation problems, but I’m not
sure if you can still get them.
V+
1 2 V
330kΩ
Wind noise, vocal pops and handling cause
microphones to generate a lot of low-frequency transients which cause all sorts of
problems, such as clipping, intermodulation and transformer saturation. These are
best removed as soon as possible in the
signal chain. A simple compromise is to
put a smaller capacitor in series with C8,
C9 and VR1 (the gain control). This can
consist of two 22µF tantalum bead capacitors in parallel back-to-back. These are then
shorted out by a switch to turn the filter off.
Unfortunately, the cut-off frequency varies
with gain setting. A selection of capacitors
could be wired to an extra gang in a gain
3 5 µ A
kΩ
1 5 0 µ F
1 6 V
T a nta l um
+
5 5 3 2 /4
+
+
–
Input
1 .5 V
Isink
1 5 0 µ F
1 6 V
T a nta l um
D ecrea se resi st ors b y f a ctor of 5 f or
w et a l um i ni um el ectrol yt i c ca pa ci tors
d ue to h i g h er l ea ka g e.
Fig.48. The biased bi-polar tantalum
capacitor circuit used in Midas mixers.
Low distortion, lasts for ever. Midas
also biased the 5534 output stage into
displaced class A for lower distortion.
(Although in this case the current sunk will
have little effect – around 5mA is needed).
Practical Electronics | August | 2021
Fig.49. The effect of the Midas circuit on a 7Vpk-pk signal into 600Ω (no transformer).
49
steepens the slope and raises the cut off
frequency to that shown in Fig.51. The
inductor must be well shielded to avoid
hum pick-up, such as a ferrite pot core.
Leaving the 750Ω damping resistor off
gives a resonant hump which can be useful
for adding ‘warmth’ to voices, as shown
in Fig.52. This can be made switchable.
Measuring distortion
Fig.51. The second-order high-pass filter response from Fig.50 with a cut-off frequency
of 95Hz, which should be changed to suit different voices.
Distortion is a measurement requiring
expensive equipment. I started off with a
homemade ETI Linsley-Hood distortion
analyser (see Fig.53), and then moved to
a Lindos, one of the best examples of degenerate digital design with a grey-on-grey
LCD. I recently moved to the Audio Precision instrument shown in Fig.54 – having
waited 15 years for the price to drop like
a good car from £14,000 to £1500. The
software is horrid, like Windows Vista,
but the hardware (apart from the noisy
fan) is unsurpassed.
PNP transistors
There is provision on the PCB to allow
PNP transistors to be used to take advantage of their slightly better noise and Rbb
figures compared to their NPN complements. The polarity of supplies to the
collector (R7 and R8) and emitter resistors
(R9 and R10) can be reversed by means
of links. Notice that D5 and D6, C8 and
C9 also have to be reversed. Fig.55 shows
how centre-collector Japanese transistors,
such as the 2SD655 are installed.
Fig.52. Effect of removing the damping resistor RD in Fig.50. The humped characteristic
is enhancing in some speech applications.
switch. A better solution is a 1200mH inductor strapped across the input after the
coupling capacitors C1 and C2, as shown
in Fig.50. This does not cause a significant
distortion- or impedance-induced noise
problem. Reducing the capacitors to 6.8µF
48V transistor power
Groner found running the transistor collectors off the 48V phantom power rail
reduced the noise at minimum gain by
5.3dB. This mod can only be done with
NPN transistors. The resistors R7 and R8
have to be increased to 9.1kΩ 0.5W. This
can be done by simply putting in 6.2kΩ
resistors into the positions marked REX1
and REX2 on the PCB, and putting a diode in the link to the positive 15V rail.
PNP transistors may benefit by taking
the emitter resistors to +48V which will
provide a more constant current, giving
better matching. (There is no provision
on the board for this – this is for experimentation only, so implementing it will
be a bit messy!)
Battery version
Fig.53. This Linsley-Hood distortion analyser gave 25 years of solid service.
50
The second op amp stage can be eliminated by feeding the outputs of the gain
stages (IC2) into an output transformer
or balanced output directly. This will reduce current consumption by 4mA and
avoid the differential amplifier noise. I’ve
found the Vigortronix VTX-101-007 to be
an excellent transformer for this job. It is
possible to then use the preamplifier with
a couple, or even four PP3 batteries as a
remote gain booster. Current consumption
Practical Electronics | August | 2021
Fig.54. My Linsley-Hood unit has now been replaced with this Audio Precision unit, so
graphs can be more easily produced.
Fig.55. Most low-noise Japanese
transistors have their collectors in the
centre. These have to be inserted in TO5
sockets, as shown here.
Fig.56. A low-impedance phantom-powered gain block; this had
to be inserted between the RE20 low-impedance microphone
and the Ted Fletcher Brick to get a decent signal-to-noise ratio.
into a complex piece of studio-quality
equipment taking a month of work. It
won’t fit into the vocoder box now, so
it will have to stand alone. So far it has
compared favourably with the £700 Ted
Fletcher Designs Brick microphone-preamplifier shown in Fig.57.
Leading on
There’s no point using a low-noise amp
with a noisy lead, so next month in Practically Speaking I’ll be showing how to
make a top-quality microphone lead.
1966 Practical Electronics
Transistor Guide – now complete!
Fig.57. The Ted Fletcher Brick is an amazing microphone preamplifier plus processor
for studio condenser microphones, but not suitable for low impedances, hence the
replacement design given here.
on ±9V was 13.8mA. Amazingly, I found
the unit works down to ±4.5V. Distortion
will of course be much higher for the
battery version. Large rail decoupling capacitors of say 470µF will reduce it. I’m
thinking of making a phantom-powered
Practical Electronics | August | 2021
single-rail version, like the gain booster
shown in Fig.56.
Final thoughts
What started out as a simple microphone-preamplifier has now morphed
You may remember a few issues back we
included part of a handy Transistor Guide
from the May 1966 issue of Practical Electronics. It was incomplete because our
well-thumbed copy had lost a few pages. Well, a couple of readers were kind
enough to help us out, and this month’s
download from the August 2021 page of
the PE website includes the full Guide.
Thank you David Allan and Bob Ashby.
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