Hi,
This is a circuit I'm working on for said hydrophone above. I have been informed it is acceptable to use my proposed unit.
I have blueprints for a circuit using op-amps but was wondering if the circuit below would be any good?
It is a bias applied to a transistor using a voltage divider. I was wondering how to apply the dc bias to the voltage divider on the left without affecting the incoming signal. Could I just couple the top junction of the voltage divider to a dc voltage? Would that give me a quiescent point dependant on the voltage divider that would simply show a rise or drop from half the applied dc voltage for the incoming signals, or am I barking up the wrong tree here?
The bit on the right is just a low pass filter. I'm listening for low frequency sound.
http://img205.imageshack.us/img205/470/hydcircuitby8.jpg
I am to be honest trying to avoid a power supply which involves anything more than a few batteries.
Perhaps I could use another transistor as an emitter/follower between hydrophone and voltage divider to lower the impedance of the signal on the voltage divider side and yet get the signal input impedance high so it didn't take much current to drive it?
I wonder how that is possible though given how would it cope with signals close to or below ground. I can't remember if an emitter/follower easily allows negative signals?
I'd prefer that if it is possible as I don't yet understand op amps that well.
Please if my explanation doesn't make sense tell me and I will post another picture thanks.
If I'm talking garbage due to my freshness to the subject please let me know also
