Matador
Well-known member
Referencing the secondary of the output transformer (regardless of NFB) also simplifies debugging, in that you can always just attach a scope probe to the 'non-grounded' side of the output transformer and see what is happening referenced to the common ground potential: in other words, you can see something in the preamp and the output signal on a common scope shot (provided the vertical scales are appropriate, etc).
Utilizing chassis points as circuit return paths is a poor solution, as one loses the ability to predict and control the return currents in the circuit(s).
Utilizing chassis points as circuit return paths is a poor solution, as one loses the ability to predict and control the return currents in the circuit(s).
There is no (appreciable) current flowing in the ground reference for the speaker jack: the current circulates through the secondary and the speaker only. Since most of my designs use NFB, I always return the feedback signal as a twisted pair from the speaker jack back to the point where it's injected in the phase inverter, so that's where the speaker's ground reference is attached.It does then bring me to think where is the best noise option for gnd for the speaker jack?