Audio Engineering

(Barry) #1

232 Chapter 7


Because the ideal solution to this requirement—that of employing a group of parallel
connected amplifi ers, each of which is fi ltered so that it covers a single octave band of
the frequency spectrum, whose individual gains could be adjusted separately—would be
excessively expensive to implement, conventional practice is to make use of a series of
LC-tuned circuits, connected within a feedback control system, as shown in Figure 7.68.


This gives the type of frequency response curve shown in Figure 7.56. As can be seen,
there is no position of lift or cut, or combination of control settings, that will permit a fl at
frequency response because of the interaction, within the circuitry, between the adjacent
octave segments of the pass band.








50 Hz

6K8 6K8 6K8 6K8 6K8 27 K 22 K

22 pF
0.015μ 0.033μ 0.068μ 0.15μ
‘Cut’

‘Cut’

Treble

‘Lift’

‘Lift’

0V

1 K5Hz

3 kHz

7 kHz

14 kHz

33 K 33 K

33 K

33 K

33 K

22 K

14 kHz

1K5Hz

7 kHz

3 kHz

560

Eout

33 K

33 K

33 K

22 K

3 n3 3n3

680 p

330 p

1n5

220 K 220 K

220 K

220 K

220 K

Off

Off

Off

Off

220 K

220 K

220 K

330 p

680 p

1n5

0V Bass

0.15μ 0.068μ 0.033μ 0.015μ

100 μ

Ein

400 Hz 200 Hz 100 Hz 50 Hz

22 K 22 K 22 K 22 K 6K8 22 K 6K8 22 K 6K8 22 K 6K8

100 Hz 200 Hz 400 Hz

Figure 7.66 : Clapham junction tone control.
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