Symamp - simple complementary-symmetrical amplifier (sample built)

Symamp – simple complementary-symmetrical amplifier

I have decided to design and build a sample of complementary-symmetrical amplifier that should be:

  • simple
  • reliable
  • stable
  • easy to build
  • with sufficient parameters
  • 2x50W/4ohm at 1% THD

THD is not a goal here, as nonlinear distortion below 0.1% is barely audible and if yes, than only with a sine tone at certain level. Not with music.

So, this is the circuit schematics.

symamp_sch.png


T1-T4, Q1-Q4 make the complementary-differential pairs loaded by current mirrors. Q5, Q6 and T5,T6 make a folded cascode VAS. Folded cascode is important to keep VAS current stability vs. input offset voltage. It works very well. Q10, Q11 and T20, T30 make a conventional 2EF output stage.

Loop gain stability margin is 62° and the circuit is stable even with the capacitive load, without the need to use an output coil.

symamp_loopgain.png


I have built and measured a functional sample. The PCB is too large for the reason it must fit to my pre-drilled prototype amplifier case. The PCB is carefully designed with respect to signal grounds, please note very low level of mains related components in the measurements below.

symamp_sample.jpeg


symamp_testplace.JPG


Measurements

symamp_20W_4R_1k.png


symamp_1kHz_4R_thdlevel.png


symamp_20W_4R_thdfreq.png


symamp_10k_square.JPG


symamp_2kHz_clipping.JPG
 
Nothing to surprise, it is just - good 🙂
Well - yes. Just good, built, verified, stable, without oscillations, very good temperature stability and no unwanted surprises for the builders. And, the simulation fits to the real world results, as there are no circuit tricks used.

This is a 10kHz square wave response into 4ohm//100nF load. Please note there is no output coil used and the amp is still stable with this load.

symamp_sq10k_4R_100nF.png
 
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The gain is low comparing to a traditional LTP with current mirror. I see there is negative feedback around the input stage. Make it essentially a cascode VAS. That's why you set the degenerate resistors to 0 from the input stage to make up the gain.


PS: I checked again. Based on the circuit. The VAS is about 10x current gain over the input stage. It is better than a vanilla folded cascode VAS about 20dB gain.
 
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That's why you set the degenerate resistors to 0 from the input stage to make up the gain.
Yes I needed more gain. The folded cascode is used for the reason of VAS current stability. If it is not used, even 1mV offset change makes the VAS current accelerate to universe. As of now with folded cascode, it is perfectly stable. VAS current is 10mA.

I have a lot of experience with folded cascode designs, the first one was in 2009 and of course you will find it here at diyaudio as well.

https://pmacura.cz/dispre2_en.htm
 
Applying Solomon (non cascode) analysis by eyeball, suggests GBWP=30MHz and SR=10V/usec ; are either of these close to correct?
SR should be right. I am not sure the bandwidth.
From the bode plot from OP, the bandwidth seems low for the gm=1ma/27. I suspect the LTP is actually working in one arm. Only half of input current could be used to charge miller cap.
So half of 30MHz would be 15MHz. 21 times close loop gain, then you get 700KHz from the bode plot in the OP.
 
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I suspect the LTP is actually working in one arm. Only half of input current could be used to charge miller cap.
The LTP is almost perfectly balanced, simulated and confirmed by measurements. Do not forget where the cascode current flows.

symamp_currents.png


You guys guess too much😉.

The amp is able to handle difficult loads quite well, without a big penalty compared to 4ohm (I do not test 8ohm as speakers go much lower). Below some plots with 2.5 ohm load.

symamp_1kHz_2R5_thdlevel.png


symamp_2R5_4R_thdfreq.png



The amp must be stable and rugged.

P.S.: SR is not very high, but enough for audio and for this low power amplifier. You can see no problems at THD/20kHz/BW90kHz plots. SR could be higher if compensation caps are made lower. But why? It results only in worse stability and less immunity to capacitive load. I do not like chasing numbers for numbers.
 
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The LTP is almost perfectly balanced, simulated and confirmed by measurements. Do not forget where the cascode current flows.
Could you simulate it with traditional vas and make bode plot? I know it will blow up vas in reality, but it does no harm in simulation. Just make sure the VAS got some current. If it results twice the loop gain bandwidth, that means your original VAS only works on single end of the ltp.
 
This is one of the torture complex load that I use to test the real amplifiers. And they must make it. Please note the EPDR at high frequencies.

View attachment 1382570

and the same load and THD vs. level test at 100Hz, 1kHz and 10kHz - up to clipping
View attachment 1382571


The 100 us SOA of most output transistors is pretty square. Dissipations that short lived at very low impedance won’t kill them like the same impedance at 100 or 20 Hz will. You just have to make sure you don’t run out of beta. It is clipping a little sooner at 10K, likely quasi-saturation in the drivers (probably outputs too, but that can’t be helped short of paralleling). Those types were intended for higher voltage rails where you probably won’t get to within 5 volts of the rail anyway. HF performance would likely be a bit better sticking a TO-92 pair in front of them. For low voltage use I might be opting for the tired old BD139/40 drivers if the triple option is considered risky. Nobody seems to like them because they are dinosaur technology and don’t have any bling factor, but they work. If making a PCB for generic use, you might want to make them flippable to go TO-220/126.
 
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SOA can be reliably simulated with a speaker (Rs + Ls) + ( Rr//Cr//Lr), resonant circuit in series with voice coil parameters. Here the low 2 x 25V and quite robust transistors are an advantage. During the last 20 years, I used more than 100 pairs of MJL3281/1302 and MJL21193/4 and never, never experienced a single failure.