25 November 2016
I have built a 1kW Class D amp for none linear digital transmissions
around 136kHz.
My Dave Pick designed amp uses four MOSFETS, two in parallel each side
driven by a dedicated driver chip. I see the odd LF amp design using
what's described as a H Bridge MOSFET array. The one I most recall
most, by Andy Talbot used rectified 240 volt single phase mains to run
it. My question is why use an H Bridge rather than paralleling more
MOSFETS in what to me is a more conventional format? Does it overcome
voltage or current limitations? Is it due to adding more capacitance
with paralleled devices? Or does it allow a linear amp to be built?
I realize a meaningful reply might be quite lengthy, so I assure you I
have Googled it, but most stuff related to in the articles is
industrial motor control.
Secondly, in a Class D none linear amp, how is the gate resistor value
chosen, and is there ever a case for not using one at all?
Thirdly, am I alone in thinking the terms Drain and Source seem back
to front and the names would intuitively be reversed so a Drain was
called a Source and vice versa? :)
Thanks. 2E0ILY
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Best regards,
Chris 2E0ILY mailto:[email protected]
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