News

If you divide 40 volts by 0.5 volts, you get 80. So you could say your amplifier or receiver has a voltage gain of 38 dB. If you were so inclined, you could express this as a formula. If you know the ...
Most everyone that has ever purchased an external amplifier is at least familiar with the term voltage gain. Simply, it is the degree to which an amplifier actually ...
The guiding formula is where GBWP OPA is the op amp's gain-bandwidth product. Use this formula during your first pass when you choose an amplifier for your circuit. After you determine the amplifier's ...
It comes from how the equations are derived. Classical analysis derives the non-inverting formula using circuit assumptions. If the op-amp gain is large, both op-amp inputs must have the same ...
Standard circuits such as an inverting amplifier are your bread and butter, and the formula gain=-Rf/Ri is tattooed on your forearm. But you can know how to use op-amps without really knowing how ...
The procedure is very simple. Many single op-amp circuits are subsets of the example circuit. The article derives Plato's Gain Formula that shows op-amp gain can be RF/RI for both positive and ...
In this article, we will finally answer the one question that has confused musicians for decades: What is the difference between "gain" and "volume" on your guitar amplifier? Although they may ...
Put simply, the Miller effect — found in 1919 by [John Milton Miller] — is the change in input impedance of an inverting amplifier due to the gain’s effect on the parasitic capacitance ...