Kevin Weddle
- Feb 23, 2004
- 1,620
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2004
- Messages
- 1,620
What is the lowest current a 200mA transistor should be operated at to prevent distortion caused by bias drift?
Low current in a transistor does not cause bias drift. Improper design does.KevinIV said:What is the lowest current a 200mA transistor should be operated at to prevent distortion caused by bias drift?
A 2N3904 transistor will melt if it has 100mA of current and a collector-emitter voltage higher than only 6.25V. if you want power then use a power transistor mounted on a heatsink. For the 2N3904, the datasheet spec's a minimum hFE of only 30 and a typical hFE of 150 at 100mA.A 2N3904 at 100mA may have a beta of 30, but I guessed it to be closer to 100.
Then it is too hot and it will fail in summer.The power dissipation was within 100mW of it's maximum.
The datasheet will tell you the details.A transistor with a 3A maximum current rating can have a minimum beta of 30. Doesn't that rating apply to any bias voltages?
If you design a circuit using maximum gain then the circuit will work properly only if it uses transistors that have maximum gain but they might not be available and you must test many transistors to look for them.the datasheet shows 2 gains, max and min, which gain should we use for safer design?