solid state diy amp 20-30w high quality

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25kHz squarewave at the output transistors. Slew rate limited.
 

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Output transistor bias current is set with pot VR12. It is measured across R7 or R8, divide voltage by .5 resistor value to get current.
Bass drivers take some energy and 20 W isn't going to do it on real speakers. (it would work okay on headphones) . Change the resistor values to AX8 and boost the power transformer to 50-60v, Same transistors, similar geometry. There you are, punchy bass. Remember transformer peak voltage is 1.4 times the nominal voltage, and these single supply amps I think they show the peak value on the print as the rail, not the nominal transformer value. I'm running AX6 at 70v regulated from 80v peak, with some resistor tweaks to center the idle voltage. My Q1 has higher gain than the simulated one, I think.
Remember you don't have to run a 60 W amp at 60W all the time. Only in EDM or house "music" is the volume constant. I listen at 1 vpp most of the time, but have ~35 v there available if Tchaikovsky asks the orchestra to fire a cannon for an emotional peak.
Remember Q3 mounts on the output transistor heat sink so that the spreader voltage collapses as the output transistors heat up. Use an insulator.
The Power Supply cap has something to do with bass response. Too small and the rail sags before a bass note is through 1/2 cycle. I'm using 4300 uf on the ST120 with one channel AX6 driver. 1000 uf preregulator, 3300 uf post regulator. My bass response is quite adequate on my 101 db@1W1m speakers 8 ohms.
These 1967 organs all sound like wet kazoos with no bass or treble until I replace the dried up PS caps, then the Hammond H100s will rattle the light fixture.
 
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Can you put a 4.7uf cap at the input instead of the 1uf?
There are 5 electrolytics that may be the bottlenecks to bass performance.

The plastic input capacitor @ 1uF will roll off the bass -1dB @ ~5Hz.
There is a much more severe roll off higher than that.
Moving the input cap up to 4u7F will change the input filter and pass even more LF to the NFB capacitor and output capacitor.
 
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The peak at HF was due to an error on my part. I had the 0.22uf cap C10 incorrectly tagged to the ground.

Here is the revised response (now with 680uf feedback return) and squarewave tests.
 

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I'd missed R18 off completely.

Here is the squarewave response and frequency response with those bits altered.

(if you install LT you can run the file and play around with it yourself 😉)
 

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Here is the circuit up to now. R4 at 1k8, R6 stepped between 1k and 1k8. You can see 1k8 (blue trace) worsens the slew rate slightly as it reduces the current in the input stage a little.
 

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You want a ~25 watt Amp?
As an Easy DIY that requires a minimum of Parts and is arguably one of the Best performing/sounding Amps designed by Anyone .. anywhere??
Go to the Pass Forum and ask there...could even peruse the DIYAudio 'shop'
Seriously unlikely one can .. honestly.. do a better amp. 😉
Curiously you had a similar suggestion in the First post/answer.
Something about leading horses to water??
 
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C16 and C17 are not conventional and tbh C16 in particular adds a 680pf cap directly across the amp output which is not always a good thing as it can provoke very high frequency instability, particularly with less than perfect layouts and grounding schemes. C17 is isolated slightly by the 0.1 ohm but I'm not sure its a good thing. It would be better to add series resistor to the caps, even if only around 4 or 5 ohms. Maybe Carlos has a different idea but that is how I see it.

Small capacitance of around 1nf (and C16 is 0.68nf) can be enough to provoke some designs into oscillating.

Maybe the reasoning was that the caps will shunt any RF picked up by the speaker leads and stop them contaminating the feedback take off point in the amp (the main output node) but if so then I think the method is a little suspect.
 
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