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Thread: Ultra Sensative Amp

  1. #16
    Addohm Newbie
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    Not sure really. Only paid 30 bucks for it on Ebay Guess that says it all though. But, then again, the mic I am using is very small, and really only meant for speaking in to. I already bought an electret mic and it is actually due in this morning. Will try that, just have to modify the stethescope head to mount it.


    Dual opamp might do the job though, I might put together my own rendition of it in to ExpressPCB and on to a breadboard when I get home from work.


  2. #17
    Mikebits Excellent Mikebits Excellent Mikebits Excellent Mikebits Excellent Mikebits Excellent Mikebits Excellent Mikebits Excellent
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    Quote Originally Posted by ericgibbs View Post
    I agree with Leftys post.

    Next project you will want to build is a 500Watt noise cancellation system.

    Putting your fingers in your ears and humming loudly .... dosnt work...
    Oh boy, how true that is. 3AM wakeups. Hehe, better him than me...
    Pay it forward.
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  3. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by ericgibbs View Post
    I agree with Leftys post.

    Next project you will want to build is a 500Watt noise cancellation system.

    Putting your fingers in your ears and humming loudly .... dosnt work...
    Haha, no doubt. She is actually due on the 2nd of December. But for now I would like to keep this project going. There is nothing in stores, currently, that is affordable and actually does what is expected of it. Most anxious couples, I would assume, do not like to wait for their (god forsaken) appointments to see\hear whats going on with their baby

  4. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mikebits View Post
    Oh boy, how true that is. 3AM wakeups. Hehe, better him than me...
    Lucky for me, I am at work at 3am!

    When my wife goes back to school though, blarg @ the 2pm wake-ups! hehe

  5. #20
    ericgibbs Excellent ericgibbs Excellent ericgibbs Excellent ericgibbs Excellent ericgibbs Excellent ericgibbs Excellent ericgibbs Excellent ericgibbs Excellent ericgibbs Excellent ericgibbs Excellent ericgibbs Excellent
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    Quote Originally Posted by Addohm View Post
    Haha, no doubt. She is actually due on the 2nd of December. But for now I would like to keep this project going. There is nothing in stores, currently, that is affordable and actually does what is expected of it. Most anxious couples, I would assume, do not like to wait for their (god forsaken) appointments to see\hear whats going on with their baby
    hi,
    As you have no point of reference for understanding the sounds you may hear, you could easily get yourself stressed out for no reason.

    I would recommend that you build a A/V baby monitor for the babies bedroom.
    Eric " Good enough is Perfect "
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  6. #21
    audioguru Excellent audioguru Excellent audioguru Excellent audioguru Excellent audioguru Excellent audioguru Excellent audioguru Excellent audioguru Excellent audioguru Excellent audioguru Excellent
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    Hi Addohm,
    Your mic preamp and LM386 power amplifier won't work.
    The preamp has the input to the TLC072 biased at only 0.089V but the datasheet shows that it must be at least 0.5V. Make it 4.5V.
    The mic (dynamic) shorts the input to 0V anyway because there is no input coupling capacitor.

    My Electronic Stethoscope was fixed by me, not designed by me so I didn't change its input to be a high input impedance non-inverting type.
    Your preamp is a inverting type with a very low input impedance.

    The datasheet for the TLC072 explains that it has Cmos inputs that have a fairly high capacitance that causes the opamp to oscillate when its feedback resistor has a high value. It also oscillates when the load capacitance is more than about 100pF. The opamp should have a coupling capacitor feeding the volume control to block DC.

    Your LM386 power amplifier is missing the RC network at its output as shown on the datasheet. It will oscillate without them.

    Both ICs need a supply bypass capacitor.

    Please post your schematic here instead of at ImageShack.
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    Last edited by audioguru; 26th November 2008 at 02:18 PM.
    Uncle $crooge

  7. #22
    chemelec Good chemelec Good chemelec Good chemelec Good
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    Quote Originally Posted by audioguru View Post
    I used a thick plastic lid from a jar of peanut butter. I drilled a hole in its center, mounted a rubber grommet in the hole then mounted an electret mic in the grommet. The mic didn't touch the skin and the flange of the lid sealed out external noise and prevented acoustical feedback to headphones. A speaker might cause acoustical feedback.
    I used a lowpass filter to attenuate background noises but pass heartbeats. I will post a pcb layout if you ask.
    Hi Audioguru, Not that I need it, But it Looks like a Good design for this purpose.
    Gary
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  8. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by Space Varmint View Post
    I would suggest putting a Darlington amp configuration on the mic input.
    No.
    A dynamic mic is 600 ohms and an electret mic is about 3.3k ohms.
    Opamps already have a darlington input and most low noise opamps have FET inputs so extra transistors used as a darlington are not needed.

    A single 2N3904 transistor used as an emitter-follower with a 4.7k emitter resistor has an input impedance of about 611k which is high enough for almost anything. Adding a second transitor to make them a darlington increases the input impedance to about 79.4M which is rediculous.
    Uncle $crooge

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