US1822922A - Amplifying system - Google Patents

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US1822922A
US1822922A US297199A US29719928A US1822922A US 1822922 A US1822922 A US 1822922A US 297199 A US297199 A US 297199A US 29719928 A US29719928 A US 29719928A US 1822922 A US1822922 A US 1822922A
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electrodes
output
resistor
resistors
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US297199A
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Charles A Culver
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Wired Radio Inc
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Wired Radio Inc
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03FAMPLIFIERS
    • H03F3/00Amplifiers with only discharge tubes or only semiconductor devices as amplifying elements
    • H03F3/26Push-pull amplifiers; Phase-splitters therefor
    • H03F3/28Push-pull amplifiers; Phase-splitters therefor with tubes only

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  • My invention relates to amplifying systems in general and more specifically to amplifying systems employing thermionic tubes.
  • An object of my invention is to provide an amplifying system wherein distortion is prevented.
  • Another object of my invention is to provide an amplifying system wherein thermionic tubes are employed in an electrically balanced circuit arrangement.
  • Still another object of my invention is to provide an amplifying system wherein a plurality of balanced circuit arrangements employmg thermionic tubes ma be employed in combination without resulting in distorted signal energy.
  • a further object of my invention is to provide an amplifying system employing thermionic tubes whereby interoscillationbetween tubes is prevented.
  • Figure 1 is a schematic circuit diagram showing the amplifying system of my invention
  • Fig. 2 is a schematic circuit diagram showing another form of the amplifying system of my invention
  • Fig. 3 is a schematic circuit diagram showing the amplification system of my invention applied to a plurality of thermionic tubes
  • Fig. 4 is a schematic circuit diagram showing the amplifying system of my invention associated with a space radio radiating system.
  • Fig. 1 is a schematiccircuit arrangement of the amplifying system of my invention.
  • Thermionic tubes 1 and 2 having cathode, control electrode, and anode circuits are connected in an electrically balanced arrangement.
  • Energy to be amplified is transferred to capacities 7 and 8.
  • the potential is distributed to the control electrode circuits of thermionic tubes 1 and 2.
  • Resistors 5 and 6 are non-inductive and non-capacitive and therefore are aperiodic.
  • Source of potential 9 supplies the proper operational potential for the control electrodes of thermionic tubes 1 and 2.
  • the output circuit of thermionic tubes 1 and 2 includes resistors 10 and 11 and source of potential 14.
  • the output energy is transferred to additional amplifiers or load circuits by means of capacities 12 and 13.
  • Resistors 10 and 11 distribute proper potentials to the anode electrodes of thermionic tubes 1 and 2 respectively and as resistors 5 and 6, are noninductive, non-capacitive and therefore aperiodic.
  • Fig. 2 of the accompanying drawings is a schematic circuit diagram showing the amplifying system of my invention, wherein thermionic tubes 1 and 2, having cathode, control electrode and anode circuits, are connected in an electrically balanced circuit arrangement.
  • the reference characters shown in Fig. 2 correspond to those previously referred to in Fig. 1 with the addition of radio frequency choke coils 15 and capacities 16, 17
  • Fig. 3 The manner in which a large number of thermionic tubes may be employed in an elec trically balanced circuit arrangement, is shown in Fig. 3.
  • Reference characters shown in this diagrammatic circuit arrangement correspond to the reference characters shown in Fig. 2 with the addition of capacities 18, 7a and 8a, thermionic tubes 3 and 4, source of potential 14a, and resistors 5a, 6a, 10a and 11a.
  • Resistors 5a and 6a are non-inductive and non-capacitive corresponding to resistors 5 and 6 respectively.
  • Resistors 10a and 11a are non-inductive and non-capacitive corresponding to resistors 10 and 11 respectively.
  • Capacities 7 a and 8a correspond to capacities 7 and 8 respectively.
  • Capacity 18 is common to resistors 5a and 6a completing the transfer of energy from resistors 10 and 11 to resistors 5a and 6a.
  • Fig. 4 is a schematic circuit diagram of the amplifying system of my invention employed in connection with a thermionic tube power amplifier 3 and a space radio radiating system 20.
  • the system of my invention is particularly useful in such a method of am- Wlll depend on the frequency characteristics of the energy in the circuits in which they are included. For audio frequency amplification such capacities will be of the order of one microfarad While for high frequency amplification, as illustrated by the circuit arrangement of Fig. 4, they will be of the order of one thousand micro-microfarads.
  • the audio frequency amplifier circuit arrangement may be similar to the circuit arrangements illustrated in Fig. 1 or Fig. 3. Audio frequency energy amplified by such circuit arrangements may be caused to modulate the carrier frequency of a high frequency generating system. The modulated high frequency energy may be transferred to thermionic tubes 1 and 2 by means of input circuit K. As a result of the radio frequency energy transferred to the resistors 5 and 6, alternating potential will be impressed upon the control electrodes of thermionic tubes 1 and 2.
  • the potentials of the two control electrodes will differ in phase by 180.
  • the resulting alternating current component in the two anode circuits will therefore be additive.
  • the high frequency energy from the anode circuits is transferred to a load circuit, herein illustrated as a power amplifier 3 and space radio radiating system 20.
  • a load circuit herein illustrated as a power amplifier 3 and space radio radiating system 20.
  • Adjustable connection to all resistors is provided for adjusting the impedances of the input and output circuits.
  • the amplifying system of my invention may be employed in circuits of relatively high impedance.
  • Thermionic tubes having more than three electrodes, or other types of tubes such as photo electric tubes may be employed.
  • two electron tubes each having filament, grid and plate electrodes, a source of power connected to said filament electrodes, an aperiodic input resistor, an' aperiodic output resistor, each of said resistors being provided with a multiplicity of variable intermediate tap connections, two inductance elements, a
  • Patent of the United'States is as source of plate potential, a plurality of condensers, a balanced network wherein said filament electrodes are connected together and to a central tap of said input resistor, said filament electrodes being connected through said source of plate potential and one of said condensers in series to a central tap on said output resistor, said grid electrodes connected to taps on said input resistor on opposite sides of said central tap, each of said plate electrodes being connected through a condenser to a tap on said output resistor, said two plates being connected to opposite sides of said central tap of said output resistor, saidinductance elements being connected respectively from a point on saidconnection from filament to output resistor intermediate said source of plate potential and said condenser respectively to points on said connections from said plate electrodes to said opposite taps on said output resistors intermediate said plate electrodes and said condensers, input connections for said amplifying system connected to taps on said input resistor on opposite sides of said central tap thereof, output connections for said amplifying system connected to taps on said
  • two electron tubes each having filament, grid and plate electrodes, a source of power connected to said filament electrodes, an aperiodic input resistor, an aperiodic output resistor, each of said resistors being provided with a multiplicity of variable intermediate tap connections, two inductance elements, a source of plate potential, a source of grid biasing potential, a plurality of condensers, a balanced network wherein said filament electrodes are connected together and through said source of grid biasing potential to a central tap of said input resistor, said filament electrodes being connected through said source of plate potential and one of said condensers in series to a central tap on said output resistor, said grid electrodes connected to taps on' said input resistor on opposite sides of said central tap, each of said plate electrodes being connected through a condenser to a tap on said output resistor, said two plates being connected to opposite sides of said central tap of said output resistor, said inductance elements being connected respectively from a point on said connection from filament
  • a plurality ofelectron tubes arranged symmetrically in two groups, each of said tubes having filament, grid, and plate electrodes, a source of power connected to said filament electrodes, the corresponding electrodes of the tubes of each of said groups being connected together, an aperiodic input resistor, an aperiodic output resistor, each of said resistors being provided with a multiplicity of variable intermediate tap connections, two inductance elements, a source of plate potential, a plurality of condensers, a balanced network wherein said filament electrodes are connected together and to a central tap of said input resistor, said filament electrodes being connected through said source of plate potential and one of said condensers in series to a central tap on said output resistor, said grid electrodes connected to taps on said input resistor on opposite sides of said central tap, each of said plate electrodes being connected through a condenser to a tap on said output resistor, said two plates being connected to opposite sides of said central tap of said output resistor
  • each of said units comprising two electron tubes each having filament, grid, and plate electrodes, a source of power connected to said filament electrodes, an aperiodic input resistor, an aperiodic output resistor, each of said resistors being provided with a multiplicity of variable intermediate tap connections, a source of plate potential, a plurality of condensers, a balanced network wherein said filament electrodes are connected together and to a central tap of said input resistor,
  • said filament electrodes said source of plate potential to a central tap on said output resistor, said grid electrodes connected to taps on said input resistor on opposite sides of said central tap, said plate electrodes connected through a condenser to a tap on said output resistor, said two plates being connected to opposite sides of said central tap of said output resistor, input connections for each of said amplifier units con-- nected to taps on its input resistor on opposite sides of said central tap thereof, output connections for each of said amplifier units connected to taps on its output resistor on opposite sides of said central tap thereof, connections between the output resistor of one amplifier unit and the input resistor of the succeeding amplifier unit wherein the mid point of said output resistor is connected through a condenser to the mid point of said succeeding input resistor, and points on said output resistor on opposite sides of the mid point thereof are respectively connected through respective condensers to points on said succeeding input resistor on opposite sides of the mid point thereof, whereby the energy delivered to the input of said first amplifier unit is amplified and delivered at the output

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  • Power Engineering (AREA)
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Description

Sept. 15, 1931. c. A. CULVER 1,822,922
AMPLIFYING SYSTEM 7 Filed Aug. 3. 1928 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 IN VEN TOR.
ATTORNEY Sept. 15, 1931. c, CULYER 1,822,922
AMPLIFYING SYSTEM Filed Aug. 3, 1928 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 INVENTOR.
' @uvzfm a Mew,
BY G ATTORNEY Patented Sept. 15. 1931 UNITED STATES PATET oer-ice CHARLES A. CULVER, OF NORTHFIELD, MINNESOTA, ASSIGNOR TO WIRED RADIO, 1N0
OF NEW YORK, N. Y., A CORPORATION OF DELAWARE AMPLIFYING SYSTEM Application filed August 3, 1928. Serial No. 297,199.
My invention relates to amplifying systems in general and more specifically to amplifying systems employing thermionic tubes.
An object of my invention is to provide an amplifying system wherein distortion is prevented.
Another object of my invention is to provide an amplifying system wherein thermionic tubes are employed in an electrically balanced circuit arrangement.
Still another object of my invention is to provide an amplifying system wherein a plurality of balanced circuit arrangements employmg thermionic tubes ma be employed in combination without resulting in distorted signal energy.
A further object of my invention is to provide an amplifying system employing thermionic tubes whereby interoscillationbetween tubes is prevented.
A better understanding can be had of the amplifying system of my invention by referring to the specification to follow and to the accompanying drawings in which Figure 1 is a schematic circuit diagram showing the amplifying system of my invention; Fig. 2 is a schematic circuit diagram showing another form of the amplifying system of my invention; Fig. 3 is a schematic circuit diagram showing the amplification system of my invention applied to a plurality of thermionic tubes and Fig. 4 is a schematic circuit diagram showing the amplifying system of my invention associated with a space radio radiating system.
By employing thermionic tubes in a balanced circuit arrangement an efii'cient amplifier having a minimum of distortion is possible. There are disadvantages to the balanced circuit arrangements heretofore employed. With the systems heretofore employed the inductance and capacities, employed for intercoupling successive amplifier circuits, usually cause local oscillation to take place between the respective thermionic tubes resulting in modulation of the amplified signal which modulation is commonly referred to as distortion. Distortion can be caused in a number of ways and many times is disastrou to true transmission and reception of the desired signal which is modulation of the carrier energy by a source of energy having frequency values of a, lower order than the carrier of high frequency signaling energy. In broadcasting systems, wherein modulation is desired at voice or audio frequencies, it
frequently occurs that distortion results from cuit arrangements employing inductance and capacity are periodic. Circuits that have aperiodic frequency characteristics should employ no combination of inductance and capacity. Non-uniform amplification of sig naling energy of a wide band of frequenciesis usually caused by employing periodic circuits or modifications thereof. As heretofore mentioned, the combination of inductance and capacity in thermionic tube circuits frequently causes distortion due to intercouplingof the circuits through the capacity of the thermionic tubes resulting in the generation of local oscillations. Such oscillations produce resultant fre uencies which are to e avoided when am li cation of a particular frequency is desire With the amplifying system of my invention the foregoing disadvantages are overcome.
In the accompanying drawings, Fig. 1 is a schematiccircuit arrangement of the amplifying system of my invention. Thermionic tubes 1 and 2 having cathode, control electrode, and anode circuits are connected in an electrically balanced arrangement. Energy to be amplified is transferred to capacities 7 and 8. The potential is distributed to the control electrode circuits of thermionic tubes 1 and 2. Resistors 5 and 6 are non-inductive and non-capacitive and therefore are aperiodic. Source of potential 9 supplies the proper operational potential for the control electrodes of thermionic tubes 1 and 2. The output circuit of thermionic tubes 1 and 2 includes resistors 10 and 11 and source of potential 14. The output energy is transferred to additional amplifiers or load circuits by means of capacities 12 and 13. Resistors 10 and 11 distribute proper potentials to the anode electrodes of thermionic tubes 1 and 2 respectively and as resistors 5 and 6, are noninductive, non-capacitive and therefore aperiodic.
Fig. 2 of the accompanying drawings is a schematic circuit diagram showing the amplifying system of my invention, wherein thermionic tubes 1 and 2, having cathode, control electrode and anode circuits, are connected in an electrically balanced circuit arrangement. The reference characters shown in Fig. 2 correspond to those previously referred to in Fig. 1 with the addition of radio frequency choke coils 15 and capacities 16, 17
I and 18. In thiscircuit arrangement,provision is made for supplying the necessary anode potential to thermionic tubes 1 and 2 from source 1 1 through radio frequency choke coils 15. B employing this circuit arrangement radio requency energy is excluded from the source of potential and the resistance introduced in the anode potential supply circuits of thermionic tubes 1 and 2 is greatly re duced. Hence the D. O. resistance drop through resistances 10 and 11 of the circuit as shown in Fig. 1 is avoided in the circuit in Fig. 2, which arrangement is particularly useful in high frequency amplification. Since radio frequency choke coils are employed having a comparatively straight curve for allfrequencies and resistors 10 and 11 which are non-inductive and non-capacitive, the output circuit is aperiodic.
The manner in which a large number of thermionic tubes may be employed in an elec trically balanced circuit arrangement, is shown in Fig. 3. Reference characters shown in this diagrammatic circuit arrangement correspond to the reference characters shown in Fig. 2 with the addition of capacities 18, 7a and 8a, thermionic tubes 3 and 4, source of potential 14a, and resistors 5a, 6a, 10a and 11a. Resistors 5a and 6a are non-inductive and non-capacitive corresponding to resistors 5 and 6 respectively. Resistors 10a and 11a are non-inductive and non-capacitive corresponding to resistors 10 and 11 respectively. Capacities 7 a and 8a correspond to capacities 7 and 8 respectively. Capacity 18 is common to resistors 5a and 6a completing the transfer of energy from resistors 10 and 11 to resistors 5a and 6a.
Fig. 4 is a schematic circuit diagram of the amplifying system of my invention employed in connection with a thermionic tube power amplifier 3 and a space radio radiating system 20. The system of my invention is particularly useful in such a method of am- Wlll depend on the frequency characteristics of the energy in the circuits in which they are included. For audio frequency amplification such capacities will be of the order of one microfarad While for high frequency amplification, as illustrated by the circuit arrangement of Fig. 4, they will be of the order of one thousand micro-microfarads. The audio frequency amplifier circuit arrangement may be similar to the circuit arrangements illustrated in Fig. 1 or Fig. 3. Audio frequency energy amplified by such circuit arrangements may be caused to modulate the carrier frequency of a high frequency generating system. The modulated high frequency energy may be transferred to thermionic tubes 1 and 2 by means of input circuit K. As a result of the radio frequency energy transferred to the resistors 5 and 6, alternating potential will be impressed upon the control electrodes of thermionic tubes 1 and 2.
At any given instant the potentials of the two control electrodes will differ in phase by 180. The resulting alternating current component in the two anode circuits will therefore be additive. The high frequency energy from the anode circuits is transferred to a load circuit, herein illustrated as a power amplifier 3 and space radio radiating system 20. Adjustable connection to all resistors is provided for adjusting the impedances of the input and output circuits. The amplifying system of my invention may be employed in circuits of relatively high impedance.
I realize that many modifications of the amplifying system of my invention are possible. Thermionic tubes having more than three electrodes, or other types of tubes such as photo electric tubes may be employed. Al-
though batteries are illustrated as sources of electrical energy. It is obvious that any suitable source of energy may be employed. It is to be understood that the foregoing modifications and other modifications of the amplifying system of my invention may be employed without departing from the spirit of my lnvention and it is further understood that the embodiments of my invention are not limited to the foregoing specification or to the accompanying drawings but only as defined in the scope of the appended claims.
What I claim as new and desire to secure by Letters follows:
1. In an amplification system, in combination, two electron tubes each having filament, grid and plate electrodes, a source of power connected to said filament electrodes, an aperiodic input resistor, an' aperiodic output resistor, each of said resistors being provided with a multiplicity of variable intermediate tap connections, two inductance elements, a
Patent of the United'States is as source of plate potential, a plurality of condensers, a balanced network wherein said filament electrodes are connected together and to a central tap of said input resistor, said filament electrodes being connected through said source of plate potential and one of said condensers in series to a central tap on said output resistor, said grid electrodes connected to taps on said input resistor on opposite sides of said central tap, each of said plate electrodes being connected through a condenser to a tap on said output resistor, said two plates being connected to opposite sides of said central tap of said output resistor, saidinductance elements being connected respectively from a point on saidconnection from filament to output resistor intermediate said source of plate potential and said condenser respectively to points on said connections from said plate electrodes to said opposite taps on said output resistors intermediate said plate electrodes and said condensers, input connections for said amplifying system connected to taps on said input resistor on opposite sides of said central tap thereof, output connections for said amplifying system connected to taps on said output resistor on opposite sides of said central tap thereof, where by the energy supplied to said input connections is amplified and delivered to said output connections substantially without distortion.
2. In an amplification system, in combination, two electron tubes each having filament, grid and plate electrodes, a source of power connected to said filament electrodes, an aperiodic input resistor, an aperiodic output resistor, each of said resistors being provided with a multiplicity of variable intermediate tap connections, two inductance elements, a source of plate potential, a source of grid biasing potential, a plurality of condensers, a balanced network wherein said filament electrodes are connected together and through said source of grid biasing potential to a central tap of said input resistor, said filament electrodes being connected through said source of plate potential and one of said condensers in series to a central tap on said output resistor, said grid electrodes connected to taps on' said input resistor on opposite sides of said central tap, each of said plate electrodes being connected through a condenser to a tap on said output resistor, said two plates being connected to opposite sides of said central tap of said output resistor, said inductance elements being connected respectively from a point on said connection from filament to output resistor intermediate said source of plate potential and said condenser respectively to points on said connections from said plate electrodes to said oppositetaps on said output resistors intermediate said plate electrodes and said condensers, input connections for said amplifying system connected to taps on said input resistor on opposite sides of said central ta thereof, output connections for said amplifying system connected to taps on said output resistor on op osite sides of said central tap thereof, whereby the energy supplied to said input connections is amplified and delivered to said output connections substantially without distortion.
3. In an amplification system, in combination, a plurality ofelectron tubes arranged symmetrically in two groups, each of said tubes having filament, grid, and plate electrodes, a source of power connected to said filament electrodes, the corresponding electrodes of the tubes of each of said groups being connected together, an aperiodic input resistor, an aperiodic output resistor, each of said resistors being provided with a multiplicity of variable intermediate tap connections, two inductance elements, a source of plate potential, a plurality of condensers, a balanced network wherein said filament electrodes are connected together and to a central tap of said input resistor, said filament electrodes being connected through said source of plate potential and one of said condensers in series to a central tap on said output resistor, said grid electrodes connected to taps on said input resistor on opposite sides of said central tap, each of said plate electrodes being connected through a condenser to a tap on said output resistor, said two plates being connected to opposite sides of said central tap of said output resistor, said inductance elements being connected respectively from a point on said connection from filament to output resistor intermediate said source of plate potential and said condenser respectively to points on said connections from said plate electrodes to said opposite taps on said output resistors intermediate said plate electrodes and said condensers, input connections for said amplifying system connected to taps on said input resistor on opposite sides of said central tap thereof, output connections for said amplifying system connected to taps on said output resistor on opposite sides of said central tap thereof, whereby the energy supplied to said input connections is amplified and delivered to said output connections substantially without distortion.
4. In a non-distorting amplifying system, a plurality of amplifier units. each of said units comprising two electron tubes each having filament, grid, and plate electrodes, a source of power connected to said filament electrodes, an aperiodic input resistor, an aperiodic output resistor, each of said resistors being provided with a multiplicity of variable intermediate tap connections, a source of plate potential, a plurality of condensers, a balanced network wherein said filament electrodes are connected together and to a central tap of said input resistor,
said filament electrodes said source of plate potential to a central tap on said output resistor, said grid electrodes connected to taps on said input resistor on opposite sides of said central tap, said plate electrodes connected through a condenser to a tap on said output resistor, said two plates being connected to opposite sides of said central tap of said output resistor, input connections for each of said amplifier units con-- nected to taps on its input resistor on opposite sides of said central tap thereof, output connections for each of said amplifier units connected to taps on its output resistor on opposite sides of said central tap thereof, connections between the output resistor of one amplifier unit and the input resistor of the succeeding amplifier unit wherein the mid point of said output resistor is connected through a condenser to the mid point of said succeeding input resistor, and points on said output resistor on opposite sides of the mid point thereof are respectively connected through respective condensers to points on said succeeding input resistor on opposite sides of the mid point thereof, whereby the energy delivered to the input of said first amplifier unit is amplified and delivered at the output of said last amplifier unit substantially without distortion.
In testimony whereof I afiix my signature.
CHARLES A. CULVER.
connected through V
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Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2482194A (en) * 1944-05-13 1949-09-20 Du Mont Allen B Lab Inc Ballistoscope
US2545507A (en) * 1948-06-11 1951-03-20 John E Williams Double-bridge push-pull differential amplifier
US2611024A (en) * 1946-09-20 1952-09-16 Seismograph Service Corp Seismic signal amplifying system
US2626349A (en) * 1942-08-13 1953-01-20 Irving H Page Interference eliminating circuits
US2684278A (en) * 1948-03-12 1954-07-20 Technicon Cardiograph Corp Sensitivity control for multichannel recording apparatus
US2687935A (en) * 1948-02-10 1954-08-31 Western Union Telegraph Co Signal amplifying system for electrically actuated recording devices
US2864903A (en) * 1953-05-05 1958-12-16 Philips Corp Transistor amplifier with gain control
US2883528A (en) * 1948-10-29 1959-04-21 Gen Electric Transient analyzing system
DE1182302B (en) * 1958-01-07 1964-11-26 Maihak Ag Single stage transistor push-pull amplifier

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2626349A (en) * 1942-08-13 1953-01-20 Irving H Page Interference eliminating circuits
US2482194A (en) * 1944-05-13 1949-09-20 Du Mont Allen B Lab Inc Ballistoscope
US2611024A (en) * 1946-09-20 1952-09-16 Seismograph Service Corp Seismic signal amplifying system
US2687935A (en) * 1948-02-10 1954-08-31 Western Union Telegraph Co Signal amplifying system for electrically actuated recording devices
US2684278A (en) * 1948-03-12 1954-07-20 Technicon Cardiograph Corp Sensitivity control for multichannel recording apparatus
US2545507A (en) * 1948-06-11 1951-03-20 John E Williams Double-bridge push-pull differential amplifier
US2883528A (en) * 1948-10-29 1959-04-21 Gen Electric Transient analyzing system
US2864903A (en) * 1953-05-05 1958-12-16 Philips Corp Transistor amplifier with gain control
DE1182302B (en) * 1958-01-07 1964-11-26 Maihak Ag Single stage transistor push-pull amplifier

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