Raven Luni
- Oct 15, 2011
- 798
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2011
- Messages
- 798
Greetings,
I was reading a bit about amplifier design using a single supply and came across an article that mentioned balancing the feedback resistor with the input offset resistors to avoid unwanted bias current (or something like that anyway). This got me thinking, if I wanted an amplifier (specifically a pre-amp stage) with variable gain, the obvious thing to me would have been to make the feedback resistor variable, but after reading that, it doesnt seem like the best idea.
I had a good search and nothing really useful came up except a few circuits for varying the sign (gain from -1 to +1) which is no use. I'm not sure taking that concept and ''offsetting' it would be a great idea either.
Would I be right in assuming a variable input signal (grounded pot) and a fixed gain would have exactly the same results as a variable gain?
I was reading a bit about amplifier design using a single supply and came across an article that mentioned balancing the feedback resistor with the input offset resistors to avoid unwanted bias current (or something like that anyway). This got me thinking, if I wanted an amplifier (specifically a pre-amp stage) with variable gain, the obvious thing to me would have been to make the feedback resistor variable, but after reading that, it doesnt seem like the best idea.
I had a good search and nothing really useful came up except a few circuits for varying the sign (gain from -1 to +1) which is no use. I'm not sure taking that concept and ''offsetting' it would be a great idea either.
Would I be right in assuming a variable input signal (grounded pot) and a fixed gain would have exactly the same results as a variable gain?