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|    Message 141,566 of 143,326    |
|    Reinhard Zwirner to Christopher Howard    |
|    Re: LM386 minimum count circuit    |
|    08 Dec 25 17:46:06    |
      From: reinhard.zwirner@t-online.de              Christopher Howard schrieb:       > Hi, I had some LM386 chips on hand, and I downloaded the LM386 Low       > Voltage Audio Power Amplifier data sheet (Rev C).       >       > https://media.digikey.com/pdf/Data%20Sheets/Texas%20Instrument       %20PDFs/LM386.pdf       >       > I built, on a breadboard, the minimum part count application on page 8       > (Figure 10, section 9.2.1), except that I got rid of the 10k volume       > control resistor on pin 3, and I replaced the speaker with a 4 ohm       > resistor. Am using a 6V supply for pin 6, and feeding in test signals of       > about 5 kHz, amplitude 100 mV RMS.       >       > I'm finding, though, that — unless I ground out the input — that however       > I tweak the input frequency or amplitude, I still get garbage output.       > The output looks like some kind of complicated sum of many saturated       > signals of various frequencies.       >       > Does anybody have thoughts on where I might have gone wrong, to guide my       > troubleshooting?       >       > I re-checked my pin connections a few times, and the component values,       > which are reasonably close. I replaced the LM386 chip once as well, and       > got the same results.              After you having ommitted that 10k pot is there a DC path to ground?              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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