Matt Syson
Well-known member
Glad Abbey Road wrote all those answers, saves me the effort!
You also have to consider the devices that were available at the time of design AND the budget that was allowed. Stuffing a 5 cents transistor ahead of a TL072 to obtain at least adequate performance compared to the pair of multi transistors on a chip at what was around 10 Dollars a time was acceptable for SSL and the selling price of a 4000. Depending on how many channels the Midas was trying to sum, it is probably at least acceptable. The low base/emitter impedance of low power power transistors when run at a decent current can (I believe) produce quite a good low impedance 'virtual earth' bus when supported by a decent amount of gain to provide negative feedback. As with all life your 'best' may not be the same as anyone else's. Accessing the collector noded of an op amp to then use external transistors with lower base emitter impedance while biassing the internal pair off was used by a few companies for which chip swapping may be less successful now if the originals were NPN and you try a PNP paired 'wonder' amplifier. You then have to consider if the components around the summing stage are laid out suitably for op amps with much higher high frequency capability AND can remain stable when the incoming buses can have significant and possibly varying capacitances to ground. As with everything in life, 'it depends'!
Matt S
You also have to consider the devices that were available at the time of design AND the budget that was allowed. Stuffing a 5 cents transistor ahead of a TL072 to obtain at least adequate performance compared to the pair of multi transistors on a chip at what was around 10 Dollars a time was acceptable for SSL and the selling price of a 4000. Depending on how many channels the Midas was trying to sum, it is probably at least acceptable. The low base/emitter impedance of low power power transistors when run at a decent current can (I believe) produce quite a good low impedance 'virtual earth' bus when supported by a decent amount of gain to provide negative feedback. As with all life your 'best' may not be the same as anyone else's. Accessing the collector noded of an op amp to then use external transistors with lower base emitter impedance while biassing the internal pair off was used by a few companies for which chip swapping may be less successful now if the originals were NPN and you try a PNP paired 'wonder' amplifier. You then have to consider if the components around the summing stage are laid out suitably for op amps with much higher high frequency capability AND can remain stable when the incoming buses can have significant and possibly varying capacitances to ground. As with everything in life, 'it depends'!
Matt S