Learning About Class A Amplifiers - Links & Resources Provided

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Class A amplifiers utilize single transistors or tubes to amplify the entire dynamic range of a signal, covering both positive and negative phases. Resources shared include insights from Rod Elliot on Nelson Pass's ZEN Amplifier and links to detailed design documents and tutorials. The discussion highlights that Nelson Pass's designs incorporate standard operational amplifier principles, using a differential pair and traditional single-ended Class A stages. The historical context notes that Pass's first Class A design dates back to 1977, coinciding with the emergence of IC operational amplifiers. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the importance of understanding Class A amplifier design for those interested in building a Nelson Pass amplifier.
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I have been reading various online tutorials on the subject. Does anyone have some good links they will share. I am trying to build my understanding of the class A amp so I understand what I am doing if I chose to build a Nelson Pass Amplifier.

I have an understanding of transistors and basic topologies already.

Thanks.
 
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imsmooth said:
I have been reading various online tutorials on the subject. Does anyone have some good links they will share. I am trying to build my understanding of the class A amp so I understand what I am doing if I chose to build a Nelson Pass Amplifier.

I have an understanding of transistors and basic topologies already.

Thanks.

Class A refers to using single transistors (or tubes) in the single path to cover the entire dynamic range (positive and negative) of the signal for power amplification. See wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_amplifier#Power_amplifier_classes

From what I've seen of his (Nelson Pass) design docs (below), it's basically a pretty standard Op Amp design implemented in discrete devices.

http://www.passdiy.com/pdf/classa_amp.pdf

It's using a differential pair to cover the + and - phases but the rest is a cascade of pretty traditional single-ended class A stages until you get to the Q9-Q16 which are actually Class B or AB drivers.

Again, pretty typical of how Op Amps are design and how most IC-based power amplifiers are designed. Note that the date of first Nelson Pass Class A is 1977, which is when IC Op Amps were still fairly new as a standard electronic part. Compare his design to a familiar Op Amp circuit like a 741:

http://www.national.com/ds/LM/LM741.pdf

This picture may be helpful in visualizing what I'm describing above:

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...0050626193617!Opamptransistorlevelcolored.png

Dark Blue - input differential pair CC-CB cascode
Red - current mirrors for biasing
Magenta - darlington gain cell with feedback
Green - CB amplifier/level shifting (cascode with gain cell)
Light Blue - class AB output driver
 
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