Connect the audio output of this circuit, to the RCA line level inputs found on Home Stereo ......
Hi Dave, the + side of the 9V supply connects to the Vcc pin, and the - side of the 9V supply connects to the Vee pin. A .1Uf capacitor connects to the Vcc and Vee pins, on the 1458 of amp. A2 provides a buffered version of 1/2 the supply voltage, as ground potential for the negative feedback of 1458.Welcome
looks a weird cct, where did you get that from ?
Firstly, it doesnt show any power rail connection to the Op-Amp (s)
secondly, I have no idea what the Op=Amp "A2" is supposed to be achieving ?
cheers
Dave
That buffering serves no purpose. That .47 uF capacitor blocks the DC anyway.A2 provides a buffered version of 1/2 the supply voltage, as ground potential for the negative feedback of 1458.

Should there be any noise on the D.C. output of the power supply, equal amounts of noise appears at both inputs of 1458. That being said, there is no potential difference in noise to be amplified by 1458.That buffering serves no purpose. That .47 uF capacitor blocks the DC anyway.
Okay, I see what you're saying. The 1458 is a dual op amp, basically two 741 op amps in the same package. I suppose I could use a 741 op amp, or a TL081 op amp.In any case, that virtual ground formed by those 2 resistors of 10 K will need a Capacitor to ground.
Have a look at the modified circuit.
You see that because the load impedance typically around 2.2 k for the above mentioned components and 741 should never be spoken of again...Do not connect to Microphone, Phono, or 600 Ohm line inputs
In terms of output strength, a Guitar level signal is stronger than a Microphone level signal, but weaker than a Line level signal. RCA Line level inputs require a -10 db signal. Pro Audio Line level inputs require a +4 db signal.What is guitar level?
Why are you considering1458, 741s ,TL081 for audio?
You see that because the load impedance typically around 2.2 k for the above mentioned components and 741 should never be spoken of again...
How so ?Yeah in terms of output strength. What you just said was gibberish you just contradicted. yourself.
How so ?
What is it you would like to do? Connect your guitar? Hook it up to a preamp terminating into a final power amplifier for speaker?I'll check it out.
I have never been but have been told firsthand about live WHO concerts...You never know when a Tube Guitar Amp may fail at a Live Gig
A2 provides a buffered version of 1/2 the supply voltage, as ground potential for the gain of 1458. In addition, A2 also buffers 9.1% of my audio input signal, which will cause a slight reduction at the output of 1458. I'm glad that you mentioned not using a bypass cap on the 10K.Looks like A2 may be 'bootstrapping' the input impedance of the 1458, and that bootstrapping may have a variation over frequency. In which case you do NOT want to bypass that 10K with a capacitor.
That's good news. Thanks for the information.The two 10K resistors provide 1/2 Vcc to BOTH opamps. A2 is not used as a buffer for that voltage - do not short the capacitor on the output of A2. Yes, the output of A2 is 9.1% of the input signal, and it's signal is fed to the inverting input of the 1458. The phase is such that it follows the direct signal input at the non-inverting input - Thereby increasing the input impedance of the 1458.