Maharshi Roy said:
But I wnat to ask that why it gets clipped? The inner mechanism,,,we obviously don't have a clipper set there...
Here's how to wrap your mind around what the guys are telling you.
Take the circuit in your link to the extreme:
Imagine that transistor as a switch instead of a linear device.
When the switch is open, that is transistor driven to OFF state, what's voltage at the collector?
Will driving the transistor harder OFF change that? Of course not, off is off.
That's positive clipping.
If not intentional, it's caused by applying too much input signal and driving the transistor OFF..
When the switch is closed, that is transistor driven into saturation, what's voltage at the collector ?
Will driving the transistor harder into saturation change that? Of course not, full on is full on.
That's negative clipping.
If not intentional, it's caused by applying too much input signal and saturating the transistor..
A prudent circuit designer arranges his bias circuit to handle as much signal as he can. He'll clip top and bottom of the waveform at about same amount of input signal.
Your link sort of explained that the other direction.
Halfway down it in paragraph "Amplitude Distortion due to Clipping" is a nice diagram. That'd be a good job of biasing , it clips both top and bottom about same signal amplitude.
As author noted though, musicians like distortion...
hope i didn't belabor the obvious. Sometimes exaggeration is a useful thinking tool.
old jim