M
Minion
Blow Me !!!
It"s there simply because I coppied the input part of the curcuit from a DOD Overdrive which has the 10k in that position....


I'm looking to adopt a preamp project, but I don't even know where to begin... mshilarious, how are you managing $20/channel? I know your stuff is good, so you must be doing something right![]()
Well, technically Northern Virginia, just outside of Fairfax, but I was in school at AU for the past couple years (just finished my degree in December and I'm still a little weirded out by that).Hey, where are you in DC? I spend the best 33 years of my life in the DC area, before I bailed to a warmer climate![]()
Well, technically Northern Virginia, just outside of Fairfax, but I was in school at AU for the past couple years (just finished my degree in December and I'm still a little weirded out by that).
What do you mean by IC preamp?
What HS you go to?
IC = integrated circuit, meaning an opamp or instrumentation amp (which is really just three opamps) on a chip. The alternative is a discrete circuit, which can be either tube or solid-state, meaning transistors. Some people will only call ICs solid-state and say that a discrete transistor circuit is not solid-state. Those people are very confused. There are also discrete opamps--an opamp is a type of circuit, not a type of construction. Heck, you can build an opamp with tubes!
While all-tube circuits (meaning tube rectifiers, no semiconductors anywhere) are still common in guitar amps, they are very rare in mic amps (I don't know of one, but maybe there are still some out there). Purists consider a mic amp as a tube pre only if the audio path is all-tube. I personally don't care, they are all components; use them as you see fit, in any combination you like!
So your basic options are:
- IC (solid-state; transistors on a chip)
- discrete transistors
- tubes
- some combination of the above
IC & discrete transistor combinations are very common, but my cheap DIY pre is all IC in the audio path. You can buy really, really good ICs these days that are very cheap for what they do. My pre will use OPA2227 in a two-stage design.
Would you care to share your design? Or even better, create a DIY kit like you've done for your mic and sell it from your site or a "group buy"?
MSHilarious - have you considered adding input tranformers to your simple pres? I bought this "Gaines" single channel one from mrbowes, and it's extremely basic - 1 dual opamp and input transformer, and I really like it. It does have unbalanced output, which hasn't been an issue for me, but I suppose that's easy enough to fix.
What HS you go to?
I think I did, on another thread here. I'll have a look and post a link later. No, I'm not really interested in offering a kit. First, it's a single-supply design, which most people would not want to trouble with. Second, the PCB is tiny (0.5" * 1.525"), and uses 0603 SMT components. Not too many people would want to work with that.
It looks like this--there is a separate board for the input, with the phantom supply resistors, switching, LEDs, input diodes, etc--this is just the two opamp stages with gain control, output, virtual ground, and power filtration. I also have a separate board that does my meter LED (although if you are running into a converter with a meter, just design your pre with headroom above 0dBFS and don't worry about that).
Is that the same PCB you used for your mics?