Bob Cordell
Designing Audio Circuits and Systems
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Bob Cordell
Designing Audio Circuits and Systems
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Designing Audio Circuits and Systems is a comprehensive guide to audio circuits and systems design. Beginning with analog audio circuit design basics that a novice can understand, this book offers insight all the way through to in-depth design techniques for many different audiophile and professional audio circuits and functions.
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Designing Audio Circuits and Systems is a comprehensive guide to audio circuits and systems design. Beginning with analog audio circuit design basics that a novice can understand, this book offers insight all the way through to in-depth design techniques for many different audiophile and professional audio circuits and functions.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 698
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. Juni 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 257mm x 180mm x 47mm
- Gewicht: 1544g
- ISBN-13: 9781032010908
- ISBN-10: 1032010908
- Artikelnr.: 70148597
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 698
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. Juni 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 257mm x 180mm x 47mm
- Gewicht: 1544g
- ISBN-13: 9781032010908
- ISBN-10: 1032010908
- Artikelnr.: 70148597
Bob Cordell is an electrical engineer who has been deeply involved in audio since his adventures with vacuum tube designs in his teen years. He is an equal¿opportunity designer to this day, having built amplifiers and preamplifiers with vacuum tubes, bipolar transistors, JFETs and MOSFETs, and is a prolific designer of audio test equipment, including a high-performance THD analyzer and many purpose-built pieces of audio test gear. He has published numerous articles and papers on power amplifier design and distortion measurement in the popular press and in the Journal of the Audio Engineering Society. In 1983 he published a power amplifier design combining vertical power MOSFETs with error correction, achieving unprecedented distortion levels of less than 0.001% at 20 kHz. He previously published the book Designing Audio Power Amplifiers. Bob is an avid DIY loudspeaker builder and has combined this endeavor with his electronic interests in the design of powered audiophile loudspeaker systems. He also consults in the audio and semiconductor industries and has presented audiophile listening and measurement workshops with his colleagues at the Rocky Mountain Audio Fest and the Home Entertainment Show. As an electrical engineer, Bob has worked at Bell Laboratories and other related telecommunications companies, where his work has included design of integrated circuits and fiber optic communications systems. Bob holds 17 patents and has presented numerous papers at the International Solid State Circuits Conference (ISSCC), the Convention of the Audio Engineering Society and other related professional meetings. Bob maintains an audiophile website at www.cordellaudio.com where diverse material on audio electronics, loudspeakers and instrumentation can be found.
1. Introduction 2. A Simple Preamplifier Design 3. Circuit Building Blocks
4. Passive Components 5. Surface-Mount Technology 6. Poles, Zeros, Networks
and Bode Plots 7. Semiconductors 8. Operational Amplifiers 9. Negative
Feedback 10. Noise 11. Filters 12. Distortion and Its Measurement 13.
Switches and Relays 14. Power Supplies and Grounding 15. Moving Magnet
Phono Preamplifiers 16. Moving Coil Phono Preamps 17. Tape Preamps and
NAB/IEC Equalization 18. Microphone Preamps 19. Balanced Inputs and Outputs
20. Equalizers and Tone Controls 21. Headphone Amplifiers 22. Volume,
Balance, Fader and Panning Controls 23. Digital-to-Analog Converters 24.
Active Crossovers and Loudspeaker Equalization 25. Voltage-Controlled
Amplifiers 26. Compressors and Other Dynamic Processors 27. Level Displays
and Metering 28. Microcontrollers and Microcomputers 29. Mixers and
Recording Consoles 30. DI Boxes and Microphone Splitters
4. Passive Components 5. Surface-Mount Technology 6. Poles, Zeros, Networks
and Bode Plots 7. Semiconductors 8. Operational Amplifiers 9. Negative
Feedback 10. Noise 11. Filters 12. Distortion and Its Measurement 13.
Switches and Relays 14. Power Supplies and Grounding 15. Moving Magnet
Phono Preamplifiers 16. Moving Coil Phono Preamps 17. Tape Preamps and
NAB/IEC Equalization 18. Microphone Preamps 19. Balanced Inputs and Outputs
20. Equalizers and Tone Controls 21. Headphone Amplifiers 22. Volume,
Balance, Fader and Panning Controls 23. Digital-to-Analog Converters 24.
Active Crossovers and Loudspeaker Equalization 25. Voltage-Controlled
Amplifiers 26. Compressors and Other Dynamic Processors 27. Level Displays
and Metering 28. Microcontrollers and Microcomputers 29. Mixers and
Recording Consoles 30. DI Boxes and Microphone Splitters
1. Introduction 2. A Simple Preamplifier Design 3. Circuit Building Blocks
4. Passive Components 5. Surface-Mount Technology 6. Poles, Zeros, Networks
and Bode Plots 7. Semiconductors 8. Operational Amplifiers 9. Negative
Feedback 10. Noise 11. Filters 12. Distortion and Its Measurement 13.
Switches and Relays 14. Power Supplies and Grounding 15. Moving Magnet
Phono Preamplifiers 16. Moving Coil Phono Preamps 17. Tape Preamps and
NAB/IEC Equalization 18. Microphone Preamps 19. Balanced Inputs and Outputs
20. Equalizers and Tone Controls 21. Headphone Amplifiers 22. Volume,
Balance, Fader and Panning Controls 23. Digital-to-Analog Converters 24.
Active Crossovers and Loudspeaker Equalization 25. Voltage-Controlled
Amplifiers 26. Compressors and Other Dynamic Processors 27. Level Displays
and Metering 28. Microcontrollers and Microcomputers 29. Mixers and
Recording Consoles 30. DI Boxes and Microphone Splitters
4. Passive Components 5. Surface-Mount Technology 6. Poles, Zeros, Networks
and Bode Plots 7. Semiconductors 8. Operational Amplifiers 9. Negative
Feedback 10. Noise 11. Filters 12. Distortion and Its Measurement 13.
Switches and Relays 14. Power Supplies and Grounding 15. Moving Magnet
Phono Preamplifiers 16. Moving Coil Phono Preamps 17. Tape Preamps and
NAB/IEC Equalization 18. Microphone Preamps 19. Balanced Inputs and Outputs
20. Equalizers and Tone Controls 21. Headphone Amplifiers 22. Volume,
Balance, Fader and Panning Controls 23. Digital-to-Analog Converters 24.
Active Crossovers and Loudspeaker Equalization 25. Voltage-Controlled
Amplifiers 26. Compressors and Other Dynamic Processors 27. Level Displays
and Metering 28. Microcontrollers and Microcomputers 29. Mixers and
Recording Consoles 30. DI Boxes and Microphone Splitters