US2250996A - Apparatus for controlling the apparent resistance of amplifier anodes - Google Patents

Apparatus for controlling the apparent resistance of amplifier anodes Download PDF

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Publication number
US2250996A
US2250996A US316953A US31695340A US2250996A US 2250996 A US2250996 A US 2250996A US 316953 A US316953 A US 316953A US 31695340 A US31695340 A US 31695340A US 2250996 A US2250996 A US 2250996A
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amplifier
circuit
voltage
resistance
controlling
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Expired - Lifetime
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US316953A
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Harry F Mayer
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General Electric Co
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General Electric Co
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Priority claimed from US123213A external-priority patent/US2220770A/en
Application filed by General Electric Co filed Critical General Electric Co
Priority to US316953A priority Critical patent/US2250996A/en
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03FAMPLIFIERS
    • H03F1/00Details of amplifiers with only discharge tubes, only semiconductor devices or only unspecified devices as amplifying elements
    • H03F1/34Negative-feedback-circuit arrangements with or without positive feedback
    • H03F1/36Negative-feedback-circuit arrangements with or without positive feedback in discharge-tube amplifiers

Definitions

  • My invention relates to amplifier circuits which include an electron discharge amplifier.
  • the anode of the amplifier have a resistance which is materially different from its natural resistance; for example, in a radio receiver having an audio amplifier feeding a loud-speaker it is desirable that the resistance of the amplifier anode be low in order to provide the proper damping for the loud-speaker.
  • the anode resistance shall be high, for example, in tuned high gain amplifiers where a low anode resistance is undesirable because it decreases the gain and the selectivity.
  • Amplifiers with anodes having the desired low and high resistances are difiicult and expensive to construct if, indeed, they can be produced.
  • I cause the amplifier anode to have an apparent high resistance by providing circuit apparatus which functions to supply feed-back voltages from the output circuit of the amplifier to the input circuit thereof, the value of one voltage being controlled by the output current and the Value of the other voltage being controlled by the output voltage.
  • circuit apparatus which functions to supply feed-back voltages from the output circuit of the amplifier to the input circuit thereof, the value of one voltage being controlled by the output current and the Value of the other voltage being controlled by the output voltage.
  • Fig. 1 is a circuit diagram illustrating an embodiment of my invention and Fig. 2 shows a modified detail thereof.
  • I is the receiving antenna; 2 is the radio frequency amplifier stage; 3 is the converter stage; 4 is the intermediate frequency transformer connecting the stage 3 with the amplifier 5; 6 is the intermediate frequency transformer in the output circuit of the amplifier 5; 'l is the second intermediate frequency amplifier stage; 8 is the second detector stage; 9 is the first audio amplifier stage; It! is the second audio amplifier stage; and I l is the loud-speaker.
  • the transformer 6 is provided with the auxiliary or tertiary winding l2 which is wound in the same direction as, coaxially with, and close to the primary winding of this transformer.
  • Winding l2 connects in series with the cathode resistor l4 between ground and the cathode of the amplifier 5.
  • the suppressor grid connects with the ground through the by-pass capacitor l5 and with the cathode through the high resistor [6.
  • the anode of the amplifier therefore is caused to have an apparent high resistance as it is seen from the load by supplying to the input circuit of the amplifier a degenerative feed-back voltage which is proportional to the current in the output circuit of the amplifier and a regenerative voltage which is proportional to the voltage of the output circuit thereof.
  • Fig. 2 where the resistor is replaced by two separate resistors l8 and I9 and the latter is connected across a resonant circuit comprising the capacitor 29 and the reactor Zl.
  • This circuit being resonant at signal frequency offers a high impedance to the signal frequency in the cathode circuit but the reactor element 2
  • apparatus for causing said anode to have a higher apparent resistance comprising a resistor in that part of the cathode circuit which is common to the input and the output circuits of the amplifier whereby a degenerative voltage responsive to the current in said output circuit is applied to said input circuit, a load circuit and a transformer having a primary winding in said output circuit, a secondary winding connected to supply said load circuit and a tertiary winding in said common part of the cathode circuit in series with said resistor whereby a regenerative voltage is applied to said input circuit responsive to the voltage across the output circuit.

Description

y 29, 1941- H. F. MAYER 2,250,996 APPARATUS FOR CONTROLLING THE APPARENT RESISTANCE OF AMPLIFIER ANODES Original Filed Jan. 30, 1937 Inverwtor: Harry E Mal er HIS Attorney.
TES
F F i C AETARATUS FQR CONTROLLING THE AP- PAREN'I RESISTANCE F AMPLIFIER AN ODE S New York Original application January 30, 1937, Serial No.
Divided and this application February 2, 1940, Serial No. 316,953
1 Claim.
My invention relates to amplifier circuits which include an electron discharge amplifier. In certain uses of such amplifier circuits it is desirable that the anode of the amplifier have a resistance which is materially different from its natural resistance; for example, in a radio receiver having an audio amplifier feeding a loud-speaker it is desirable that the resistance of the amplifier anode be low in order to provide the proper damping for the loud-speaker. In other cases it is desirable that the anode resistance shall be high, for example, in tuned high gain amplifiers where a low anode resistance is undesirable because it decreases the gain and the selectivity. Amplifiers with anodes having the desired low and high resistances are difiicult and expensive to construct if, indeed, they can be produced.
It is the object of my present invention to provide improved apparatus which is connected with the amplifier circuit for causing the amplifier anode, while the circuit is in use, to have an apparent resistance which is greater than its actual resistance, my present application being a division of my copending application Serial No. 123,213, filed January 30, 1937, now Patent No. 2,220,770, November 5, 1940, for Apparatus for controlling apparent resistance of an amplifier anode.
In accordance with my invention I cause the amplifier anode to have an apparent high resistance by providing circuit apparatus which functions to supply feed-back voltages from the output circuit of the amplifier to the input circuit thereof, the value of one voltage being controlled by the output current and the Value of the other voltage being controlled by the output voltage. To give the amplifier anode a high apparent resistance I make the current-controlled feed-back voltage degenerative and the voltage-controlled feed-back voltage regenerative.
Referring to the drawing, Fig. 1 is a circuit diagram illustrating an embodiment of my invention and Fig. 2 shows a modified detail thereof. In Fig. 1, where I have chosen to show my invention as forming a part of a radio receiving system of well known form, I is the receiving antenna; 2 is the radio frequency amplifier stage; 3 is the converter stage; 4 is the intermediate frequency transformer connecting the stage 3 with the amplifier 5; 6 is the intermediate frequency transformer in the output circuit of the amplifier 5; 'l is the second intermediate frequency amplifier stage; 8 is the second detector stage; 9 is the first audio amplifier stage; It! is the second audio amplifier stage; and I l is the loud-speaker. The transformer 6 is provided with the auxiliary or tertiary winding l2 which is wound in the same direction as, coaxially with, and close to the primary winding of this transformer. Winding l2 connects in series with the cathode resistor l4 between ground and the cathode of the amplifier 5. The suppressor grid connects with the ground through the by-pass capacitor l5 and with the cathode through the high resistor [6. By this means a degenerative voltage, which is the voltage drop across the resistor I4, is supplied to the input circuit of the amplifier 5 which voltage is proportional to the current in the output circuit of the amplifier. Also, a regenerative voltage is induced in the winding l2 and which is proportional to the alternating voltage applied to the primary of the transformer 6. The anode of the amplifier therefore is caused to have an apparent high resistance as it is seen from the load by supplying to the input circuit of the amplifier a degenerative feed-back voltage which is proportional to the current in the output circuit of the amplifier and a regenerative voltage which is proportional to the voltage of the output circuit thereof.
In certain cases it may be desirable to reduce the amount of direct current cathode bias produced by the resistor Hi. This may be done in the manner shown by Fig. 2 where the resistor is replaced by two separate resistors l8 and I9 and the latter is connected across a resonant circuit comprising the capacitor 29 and the reactor Zl. This circuit being resonant at signal frequency offers a high impedance to the signal frequency in the cathode circuit but the reactor element 2| thereof readily passes direct current.
What I claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent of the United States is:
In combination with an amplifier circuit including an electron discharge amplifier having an anode in the output circuit thereof, apparatus for causing said anode to have a higher apparent resistance comprising a resistor in that part of the cathode circuit which is common to the input and the output circuits of the amplifier whereby a degenerative voltage responsive to the current in said output circuit is applied to said input circuit, a load circuit and a transformer having a primary winding in said output circuit, a secondary winding connected to supply said load circuit and a tertiary winding in said common part of the cathode circuit in series with said resistor whereby a regenerative voltage is applied to said input circuit responsive to the voltage across the output circuit.
HARRY F. MAYER.
US316953A 1937-01-30 1940-02-02 Apparatus for controlling the apparent resistance of amplifier anodes Expired - Lifetime US2250996A (en)

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Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US316953A US2250996A (en) 1937-01-30 1940-02-02 Apparatus for controlling the apparent resistance of amplifier anodes

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US123213A US2220770A (en) 1937-01-30 1937-01-30 Apparatus for controlling the apparent resistance of an amplifier anode
US316953A US2250996A (en) 1937-01-30 1940-02-02 Apparatus for controlling the apparent resistance of amplifier anodes

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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2429775A (en) * 1944-06-22 1947-10-28 Rca Corp Amplifier system
US2552809A (en) * 1945-08-27 1951-05-15 Decca Record Co Ltd Compensated amplifier circuit
US2652450A (en) * 1948-05-29 1953-09-15 Rca Corp Sync separation and automatic gain control

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2429775A (en) * 1944-06-22 1947-10-28 Rca Corp Amplifier system
US2552809A (en) * 1945-08-27 1951-05-15 Decca Record Co Ltd Compensated amplifier circuit
US2652450A (en) * 1948-05-29 1953-09-15 Rca Corp Sync separation and automatic gain control

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