Copy of Loudspeaker with Simple Amplifier - on Mon, 06/10/2024 - 15:59 Designer0 × Member for 4 years 10 months 0 designs 0 groups https://explore.partquest.com/node/659710 <iframe allowfullscreen="true" referrerpolicy="origin-when-cross-origin" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="720" scrolling="no" src="https://explore.partquest.com/node/659710"></iframe> Title Description <p>This "Live" example design includes a simple analog electronic amplifier, intended only to demonstrates the importance of multi-discipline system modeling.</p> <p>A swept frequency response test, from 40 Hz to 1000 Hz, shows the effect of the complex amplifier loading by the voice-coil and speaker-cone dynamics*. The electro-mechanical resonances strongly affect the current that must be supplied, in order to maintain a flat (controlled) output voltage over the specified frequency range. For example, the current in the voice-coil reaches a null at time 0.1 seconds, which corresponds to the effective "spring-mass" resonance frequency (60 Hz). The loudspeaker reaches its minimum impedance around 600 Hz, or at 0.6 seconds where the peak load current is observed.</p> <p>The simulation results also show that the average power (q1/npn/pwr_avg) in the BDP947 BJT exceeds its 5 Watt rating across the entire range, but especially at lower frequencies. The red "hot part monitor", with the junction to ambient thermal resistance set to 10 C/Watt, as given in the datasheet, shows the part temperature rising to over 100 C. These diagnostic indicators make it obvious that we need a bigger transistor!</p> <p>All of the parameters in blue can be changed by the user and a new simulation run. The updated scope waveform results will show the effect of that change. You can change the electrical resistance and inductance of the voice-coil, as well as the speaker cone mass and linear spring rate that affect the resonance frequency.</p> <p>* Note: Please refer to this companion example, that shows the input impedance frequency response of the loudspeaker alone:</p> <p>https://www.systemvision.com/design/loudspeaker-only-frequency-response</p> About text formats Tags LoudspeakerAmplifierelectro-mechanical resonanceBDP947NCV20071 Op-AmpBDP947 NPN TransistorMechatronicsmagnetic actuator Select a tag from the list or create your own.Drag to re-order taxonomy terms. License - None -
Copy of Passive 2nd Crossover - on Tue, 02/20/2024 - 21:28 User-1708460620Designer254236 × User-1708460620 Member for 9 months 2 designs 1 groups Welcome to the community!! https://explore.partquest.com/node/636550 <iframe allowfullscreen="true" referrerpolicy="origin-when-cross-origin" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="720" scrolling="no" src="https://explore.partquest.com/node/636550"></iframe> Title Description About text formats Tags CrossoverPassiveLoudspeaker Select a tag from the list or create your own.Drag to re-order taxonomy terms. License - None -
Copy of Loudspeaker with Simple Amplifier - on Tue, 01/02/2024 - 13:15 User-1704193178Designer252904 × User-1704193178 Member for 10 months 2 weeks 2 designs 1 groups Welcome to the community!! https://explore.partquest.com/node/627437 <iframe allowfullscreen="true" referrerpolicy="origin-when-cross-origin" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="720" scrolling="no" src="https://explore.partquest.com/node/627437"></iframe> Title Description <p>This "Live" example design includes a simple analog electronic amplifier, intended only to demonstrates the importance of multi-discipline system modeling.</p> <p>A swept frequency response test, from 40 Hz to 1000 Hz, shows the effect of the complex amplifier loading by the voice-coil and speaker-cone dynamics*. The electro-mechanical resonances strongly affect the current that must be supplied, in order to maintain a flat (controlled) output voltage over the specified frequency range. For example, the current in the voice-coil reaches a null at time 0.1 seconds, which corresponds to the effective "spring-mass" resonance frequency (60 Hz). The loudspeaker reaches its minimum impedance around 600 Hz, or at 0.6 seconds where the peak load current is observed.</p> <p>The simulation results also show that the average power (q1/npn/pwr_avg) in the BDP947 BJT exceeds its 5 Watt rating across the entire range, but especially at lower frequencies. The red "hot part monitor", with the junction to ambient thermal resistance set to 10 C/Watt, as given in the datasheet, shows the part temperature rising to over 100 C. These diagnostic indicators make it obvious that we need a bigger transistor!</p> <p>All of the parameters in blue can be changed by the user and a new simulation run. The updated scope waveform results will show the effect of that change. You can change the electrical resistance and inductance of the voice-coil, as well as the speaker cone mass and linear spring rate that affect the resonance frequency.</p> <p>* Note: Please refer to this companion example, that shows the input impedance frequency response of the loudspeaker alone:</p> <p>https://www.systemvision.com/design/loudspeaker-only-frequency-response</p> About text formats Tags LoudspeakerAmplifierelectro-mechanical resonanceBDP947NCV20071 Op-AmpBDP947 NPN TransistorMechatronicsmagnetic actuator Select a tag from the list or create your own.Drag to re-order taxonomy terms. License - None -
Copy of Loudspeaker with Simple Amplifier - on Wed, 07/05/2023 - 10:31 User-1688735416Designer247277 × User-1688735416 Member for 1 year 4 months 9 designs 1 groups Welcome to the community!! https://explore.partquest.com/node/600427 <iframe allowfullscreen="true" referrerpolicy="origin-when-cross-origin" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="720" scrolling="no" src="https://explore.partquest.com/node/600427"></iframe> Title Description <p>This "Live" example design includes a simple analog electronic amplifier, intended only to demonstrates the importance of multi-discipline system modeling.</p> <p>A swept frequency response test, from 40 Hz to 1000 Hz, shows the effect of the complex amplifier loading by the voice-coil and speaker-cone dynamics*. The electro-mechanical resonances strongly affect the current that must be supplied, in order to maintain a flat (controlled) output voltage over the specified frequency range. For example, the current in the voice-coil reaches a null at time 0.1 seconds, which corresponds to the effective "spring-mass" resonance frequency (60 Hz). The loudspeaker reaches its minimum impedance around 600 Hz, or at 0.6 seconds where the peak load current is observed.</p> <p>The simulation results also show that the average power (q1/npn/pwr_avg) in the BDP947 BJT exceeds its 5 Watt rating across the entire range, but especially at lower frequencies. The red "hot part monitor", with the junction to ambient thermal resistance set to 10 C/Watt, as given in the datasheet, shows the part temperature rising to over 100 C. These diagnostic indicators make it obvious that we need a bigger transistor!</p> <p>All of the parameters in blue can be changed by the user and a new simulation run. The updated scope waveform results will show the effect of that change. You can change the electrical resistance and inductance of the voice-coil, as well as the speaker cone mass and linear spring rate that affect the resonance frequency.</p> <p>* Note: Please refer to this companion example, that shows the input impedance frequency response of the loudspeaker alone:</p> <p>https://www.systemvision.com/design/loudspeaker-only-frequency-response</p> About text formats Tags LoudspeakerAmplifierelectro-mechanical resonanceBDP947NCV20071 Op-AmpBDP947 NPN TransistorMechatronicsmagnetic actuator Select a tag from the list or create your own.Drag to re-order taxonomy terms. License - None -
My test GalinaDesigner21 × Galina Member for 11 years 104 designs 3 groups Member of the PartQuest Explore team. https://explore.partquest.com/node/423963 <iframe allowfullscreen="true" referrerpolicy="origin-when-cross-origin" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="720" scrolling="no" src="https://explore.partquest.com/node/423963"></iframe> Title Description <p>This "Live" example design includes a simple analog electronic amplifier, intended only to demonstrates the importance of multi-discipline system modeling.</p> <p>A swept frequency response test, from 40 Hz to 1000 Hz, shows the effect of the complex amplifier loading by the voice-coil and speaker-cone dynamics*. The electro-mechanical resonances strongly affect the current that must be supplied, in order to maintain a flat (controlled) output voltage over the specified frequency range. For example, the current in the voice-coil reaches a null at time 0.1 seconds, which corresponds to the effective "spring-mass" resonance frequency (60 Hz). The loudspeaker reaches its minimum impedance around 600 Hz, or at 0.6 seconds where the peak load current is observed.</p> <p>The simulation results also show that the average power (q1/npn/pwr_avg) in the BDP947 BJT exceeds its 5 Watt rating across the entire range, but especially at lower frequencies. The red "hot part monitor", with the junction to ambient thermal resistance set to 10 C/Watt, as given in the datasheet, shows the part temperature rising to over 100 C. These diagnostic indicators make it obvious that we need a bigger transistor!</p> <p>All of the parameters in blue can be changed by the user and a new simulation run. The updated scope waveform results will show the effect of that change. You can change the electrical resistance and inductance of the voice-coil, as well as the speaker cone mass and linear spring rate that affect the resonance frequency.</p> <p>* Note: Please refer to this companion example, that shows the input impedance frequency response of the loudspeaker alone:</p> <p>https://www.systemvision.com/design/loudspeaker-only-frequency-response</p> About text formats Tags LoudspeakerAmplifierelectro-mechanical resonanceBDP947NCV20071 Op-AmpBDP947 NPN TransistorMechatronicsmagnetic actuator Select a tag from the list or create your own.Drag to re-order taxonomy terms. License - None -
My Loudspeaker with Simple Amplifier GalinaDesigner21 × Galina Member for 11 years 104 designs 3 groups Member of the PartQuest Explore team. https://explore.partquest.com/node/407977 <iframe allowfullscreen="true" referrerpolicy="origin-when-cross-origin" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="720" scrolling="no" src="https://explore.partquest.com/node/407977"></iframe> Title Description <p>This "Live" example design includes a simple analog electronic amplifier, intended only to demonstrates the importance of multi-discipline system modeling.</p> <p>A swept frequency response test, from 40 Hz to 1000 Hz, shows the effect of the complex amplifier loading by the voice-coil and speaker-cone dynamics*. The electro-mechanical resonances strongly affect the current that must be supplied, in order to maintain a flat (controlled) output voltage over the specified frequency range. For example, the current in the voice-coil reaches a null at time 0.1 seconds, which corresponds to the effective "spring-mass" resonance frequency (60 Hz). The loudspeaker reaches its minimum impedance around 600 Hz, or at 0.6 seconds where the peak load current is observed.</p> <p>The simulation results also show that the average power (q1/npn/pwr_avg) in the BDP947 BJT exceeds its 5 Watt rating across the entire range, but especially at lower frequencies. The red "hot part monitor", with the junction to ambient thermal resistance set to 10 C/Watt, as given in the datasheet, shows the part temperature rising to over 100 C. These diagnostic indicators make it obvious that we need a bigger transistor!</p> <p>All of the parameters in blue can be changed by the user and a new simulation run. The updated scope waveform results will show the effect of that change. You can change the electrical resistance and inductance of the voice-coil, as well as the speaker cone mass and linear spring rate that affect the resonance frequency.</p> <p>* Note: Please refer to this companion example, that shows the input impedance frequency response of the loudspeaker alone:</p> <p>https://www.systemvision.com/design/loudspeaker-only-frequency-response</p> About text formats Tags LoudspeakerAmplifierelectro-mechanical resonanceBDP947NCV20071 Op-AmpBDP947 NPN TransistorMechatronicsmagnetic actuator Select a tag from the list or create your own.Drag to re-order taxonomy terms. License - None -
TEST STAGE Loudspeaker with Simple Amplifier GalinaDesigner21 × Galina Member for 11 years 104 designs 3 groups Member of the PartQuest Explore team. https://explore.partquest.com/node/407942 <iframe allowfullscreen="true" referrerpolicy="origin-when-cross-origin" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="720" scrolling="no" src="https://explore.partquest.com/node/407942"></iframe> Title Description <p>This "Live" example design includes a simple analog electronic amplifier, intended only to demonstrates the importance of multi-discipline system modeling.</p> <p>A swept frequency response test, from 40 Hz to 1000 Hz, shows the effect of the complex amplifier loading by the voice-coil and speaker-cone dynamics*. The electro-mechanical resonances strongly affect the current that must be supplied, in order to maintain a flat (controlled) output voltage over the specified frequency range. For example, the current in the voice-coil reaches a null at time 0.1 seconds, which corresponds to the effective "spring-mass" resonance frequency (60 Hz). The loudspeaker reaches its minimum impedance around 600 Hz, or at 0.6 seconds where the peak load current is observed.</p> <p>The simulation results also show that the average power (q1/npn/pwr_avg) in the BDP947 BJT exceeds its 5 Watt rating across the entire range, but especially at lower frequencies. The red "hot part monitor", with the junction to ambient thermal resistance set to 10 C/Watt, as given in the datasheet, shows the part temperature rising to over 100 C. These diagnostic indicators make it obvious that we need a bigger transistor!</p> <p>All of the parameters in blue can be changed by the user and a new simulation run. The updated scope waveform results will show the effect of that change. You can change the electrical resistance and inductance of the voice-coil, as well as the speaker cone mass and linear spring rate that affect the resonance frequency.</p> <p>* Note: Please refer to this companion example, that shows the input impedance frequency response of the loudspeaker alone:</p> <p>https://www.systemvision.com/design/loudspeaker-only-frequency-response</p> About text formats Tags LoudspeakerAmplifierelectro-mechanical resonanceBDP947NCV20071 Op-AmpBDP947 NPN TransistorMechatronicsmagnetic actuator Select a tag from the list or create your own.Drag to re-order taxonomy terms. License - None -
Copy of Loudspeaker with Simple Amplifier - on Mon, 12/07/2020 - 22:53 angeltpDesigner237048 × angeltp Member for 3 years 11 months 0 designs 1 groups Add a bio to your profile to share information about yourself with other SystemVision users. https://explore.partquest.com/node/387985 <iframe allowfullscreen="true" referrerpolicy="origin-when-cross-origin" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="720" scrolling="no" src="https://explore.partquest.com/node/387985"></iframe> Title Description <p>This "Live" example design includes a simple analog electronic amplifier, intended only to demonstrates the importance of multi-discipline system modeling.</p> <p>A swept frequency response test, from 40 Hz to 1000 Hz, shows the effect of the complex amplifier loading by the voice-coil and speaker-cone dynamics*. The electro-mechanical resonances strongly affect the current that must be supplied, in order to maintain a flat (controlled) output voltage over the specified frequency range. For example, the current in the voice-coil reaches a null at time 0.1 seconds, which corresponds to the effective "spring-mass" resonance frequency (60 Hz). The loudspeaker reaches its minimum impedance around 600 Hz, or at 0.6 seconds where the peak load current is observed.</p> <p>The simulation results also show that the average power (q1/npn/pwr_avg) in the BDP947 BJT exceeds its 5 Watt rating across the entire range, but especially at lower frequencies. The red "hot part monitor", with the junction to ambient thermal resistance set to 10 C/Watt, as given in the datasheet, shows the part temperature rising to over 100 C. These diagnostic indicators make it obvious that we need a bigger transistor!</p> <p>All of the parameters in blue can be changed by the user and a new simulation run. The updated scope waveform results will show the effect of that change. You can change the electrical resistance and inductance of the voice-coil, as well as the speaker cone mass and linear spring rate that affect the resonance frequency.</p> <p>* Note: Please refer to this companion example, that shows the input impedance frequency response of the loudspeaker alone:</p> <p>https://www.systemvision.com/design/loudspeaker-only-frequency-response</p> About text formats Tags LoudspeakerAmplifierelectro-mechanical resonanceBDP947NCV20071 Op-AmpBDP947 NPN TransistorMechatronicsmagnetic actuator Select a tag from the list or create your own.Drag to re-order taxonomy terms. License - None -
Copy of Loudspeaker with Simple Amplifier - on Wed, 12/02/2020 - 14:39 gilbert.velletDesigner236968 × gilbert.vellet Member for 3 years 11 months 2 designs 1 groups Add a bio to your profile to share information about yourself with other SystemVision users. https://explore.partquest.com/node/386445 <iframe allowfullscreen="true" referrerpolicy="origin-when-cross-origin" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="720" scrolling="no" src="https://explore.partquest.com/node/386445"></iframe> Title Description <p>This "Live" example design includes a simple analog electronic amplifier, intended only to demonstrates the importance of multi-discipline system modeling.</p> <p>A swept frequency response test, from 40 Hz to 1000 Hz, shows the effect of the complex amplifier loading by the voice-coil and speaker-cone dynamics*. The electro-mechanical resonances strongly affect the current that must be supplied, in order to maintain a flat (controlled) output voltage over the specified frequency range. For example, the current in the voice-coil reaches a null at time 0.1 seconds, which corresponds to the effective "spring-mass" resonance frequency (60 Hz). The loudspeaker reaches its minimum impedance around 600 Hz, or at 0.6 seconds where the peak load current is observed.</p> <p>The simulation results also show that the average power (q1/npn/pwr_avg) in the BDP947 BJT exceeds its 5 Watt rating across the entire range, but especially at lower frequencies. The red "hot part monitor", with the junction to ambient thermal resistance set to 10 C/Watt, as given in the datasheet, shows the part temperature rising to over 100 C. These diagnostic indicators make it obvious that we need a bigger transistor!</p> <p>All of the parameters in blue can be changed by the user and a new simulation run. The updated scope waveform results will show the effect of that change. You can change the electrical resistance and inductance of the voice-coil, as well as the speaker cone mass and linear spring rate that affect the resonance frequency.</p> <p>* Note: Please refer to this companion example, that shows the input impedance frequency response of the loudspeaker alone:</p> <p>https://www.systemvision.com/design/loudspeaker-only-frequency-response</p> About text formats Tags LoudspeakerAmplifierelectro-mechanical resonanceBDP947NCV20071 Op-AmpBDP947 NPN TransistorMechatronicsmagnetic actuator Select a tag from the list or create your own.Drag to re-order taxonomy terms. License - None -
Copy of Loudspeaker with Simple Amplifier - on Thu, 11/19/2020 - 13:15 vladimir.jugDesigner236538 × vladimir.jug Member for 4 years 35 designs 1 groups Add a bio to your profile to share information about yourself with other SystemVision users. https://explore.partquest.com/node/380466 <iframe allowfullscreen="true" referrerpolicy="origin-when-cross-origin" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="720" scrolling="no" src="https://explore.partquest.com/node/380466"></iframe> Title Description <p>This "Live" example design includes a simple analog electronic amplifier, intended only to demonstrates the importance of multi-discipline system modeling.</p> <p>A swept frequency response test, from 40 Hz to 1000 Hz, shows the effect of the complex amplifier loading by the voice-coil and speaker-cone dynamics*. The electro-mechanical resonances strongly affect the current that must be supplied, in order to maintain a flat (controlled) output voltage over the specified frequency range. For example, the current in the voice-coil reaches a null at time 0.1 seconds, which corresponds to the effective "spring-mass" resonance frequency (60 Hz). The loudspeaker reaches its minimum impedance around 600 Hz, or at 0.6 seconds where the peak load current is observed.</p> <p>The simulation results also show that the average power (q1/npn/pwr_avg) in the BDP947 BJT exceeds its 5 Watt rating across the entire range, but especially at lower frequencies. The red "hot part monitor", with the junction to ambient thermal resistance set to 10 C/Watt, as given in the datasheet, shows the part temperature rising to over 100 C. These diagnostic indicators make it obvious that we need a bigger transistor!</p> <p>All of the parameters in blue can be changed by the user and a new simulation run. The updated scope waveform results will show the effect of that change. You can change the electrical resistance and inductance of the voice-coil, as well as the speaker cone mass and linear spring rate that affect the resonance frequency.</p> <p>* Note: Please refer to this companion example, that shows the input impedance frequency response of the loudspeaker alone:</p> <p>https://www.systemvision.com/design/loudspeaker-only-frequency-response</p> About text formats Tags LoudspeakerAmplifierelectro-mechanical resonanceBDP947NCV20071 Op-AmpBDP947 NPN TransistorMechatronicsmagnetic actuator Select a tag from the list or create your own.Drag to re-order taxonomy terms. License - None -