A Low Noise Balanced Input Moving Coil Preamp Using the ZTX851

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mediatechnology
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A Low Noise Balanced Input Moving Coil Preamp Using the ZTX851

Post by mediatechnology »

bcarso gave me a tip from Horowitz and Hill "Art of Electronics" 3rd Edition on the low rbb Diodes Inc./Zetex ZTX851 (NPN) and ZTX951 (PNP) transistors.

Circuit boards and assembled and tested Flat Balanced Input Moving Coil Phono Preamps are available now.

Product links:

Assembled and Tested: https://ka-electronics.com/shop/index.p ... uct_id=104
Bare PC Board: https://ka-electronics.com/shop/index.p ... uct_id=105
Assembly and Test Information https://proaudiodesignforum.com/forum/p ... f=7&t=1179

July 15, 2019. Updated schematic: viewtopic.php?f=6&t=783&start=370#p13030

Diodes Inc. ZTX851 datasheet: http://www.diodes.com/_files/datasheets/ZTX851.pdf
Diodes Inc. ZTX951 datasheet: http://www.diodes.com/_files/datasheets/ZTX951.pdf
Art of Electronics: http://www.amazon.com/Art-Electronics-P ... 521809266/

The TO-92 Zetex ZTX851/951 are designed for "emergency lighting" and are not characterized for small-signal or noise performance.
The rbb at 10 mA on the ZTX851 however is reported to be below 2 Ohms.

See:

http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/solid-st ... ost4078616
http://www.circuitsonline.net/forum/vie ... 71#1719171

The noise performance of the Zetex ZTX851 turns out to be very, very good.

This is the test circuit I used to see how well it would be as a moving coil preamp.
No effort has been made to address the DC performance - output offset is allowed to develop.

Image
A Balanced Input Balanced Output Flat Preamp for Moving Coil Cartridges or Mic Preamps Using the ZTX851. Proof of Concept Schematic.

The circuit is based on Demrow et al with Cohen low noise optimization.

Ic is 7.5 mA.
Rsource 10R
Gain (unbalanced out) +53dB (calculated)
ein -140 dBu 20 kHz BW 0.54 nV/sqrtHz

A 1R Rsource comes in around -142 dBu ein.

The ZTX851 also does quite well at lower Ic.

The gain measured just under 53 dB owing to protoboard contact resistance to the 2R2 Rgain resistor so the noise may be a tad higher.
I need to melt solder to know for sure.

I haven't measured the bias current but Ios - cartridge current - comes in at 80 nA.

An ein of -140dBu works out to be 18 Ohms. Subtracting 10R for the source and 2R2 for Rgain leaves an rbb of about 2.9 Ohms per transistor.

An NJM2068 provides almost identical noise performance to the far more expensive OPA1612 at the expense of bandwidth.
An NJM2114 is easily 3 dB noisier in this circuit.
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Re: A Low Noise Balanced In Moving Coil Preamp Using the ZTX

Post by JR. »

Nice... that topology looks familiar...(except i used PNP input devices. Not a big deal but I would be tempted to add an electrolytic cap from op amp + inputs to +15V while noise there should be common mode. )

The low Rbb is a side effect of designing the transistors for high current. The Hfe looks lower than the obsolete purpose engineered low Rbb devices the Japanese made for MC head amps back in the '70s. IIRC those old parts had betas as high as 600 or more. There is some relationship between beta and input current noise, but with low single digit source impedance, current noise is not a huge deal, and then there is some cancellation of that noise from using a balanced input and relatively large termination impedance (499 is large wrt to cart Z).

Glad to hear Brad is OK, I think he may have blocked me on facebook because of me being me. (Maybe I need to check my snarky comments about phono preamps here too :D :D ).

JR

PS: Its and old trick to use high current transistors for unintended low noise. The transistors Paul Buff used in his transamps and VCAs were general purpose medium power devices. I think he had to screen them for process noise, but back in the day we didn't have the low noise devices we do now.
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ricardo
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Re: A Low Noise Balanced In Moving Coil Preamp Using the ZTX

Post by ricardo »

I tested a lot of ZTX medium power transistors circa 1980 when I was playing with MC cartridges & preamps, and so did Peter Baxandall. They did have small Rbb' but you had to select for 1/f noise.

Once I found the Hitachi 2sa108x & 2sc254x devices, I stopped looking as they were better and didn't need selection. Can't remember if ZTX851 was among them.

Don't think the Rohm or Toshiba supa LN devices were available then. I make Rbb' for the Hitachis about 5R1. The Rohom & Toshibas between 2R & 4R4

QUAD continued using ZTX and other medium power devices for their MC preamps. Great Guru Baxandall was a consultant for QUAD

Be interested to know if your ZTX851's have 1/f noise. This is particularly important for RIAA cos the huge bass boost
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Re: A Low Noise Balanced In Moving Coil Preamp Using the ZTX

Post by mediatechnology »

I'm not seeing significant 1/f noise on the 'scope or FFTs but I haven't applied RIAA EQ to the output which does magnify the LF.

What I am seeing is the need to thermally couple the devices as I can simulate 1/f effects by simply blowing on them or creating air currents by waving my hand over the pair.
The temperature gradient does make the Vos bobble around and appears like VLF 1/f but its not.
If I put a blanket over them it goes away.
The ZTX851 aren't exactly a TO-92 so finding a clip may not be easy.
I'm thinking about wrapping them in a strip of foil and then applying heatshrink or maybe JB-Welding them together inside a metal nut or tube.

Horowitz and Hill did a 70 pV/sqrtHz transformerless ribbon mic front-end with paralleled ZTX-851s.
In the post I saw Hill didn't mention anything about selection.
The Third Edition is on my Amazon wish list.
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Re: A Low Noise Balanced In Moving Coil Preamp Using the ZTX

Post by mediatechnology »

John - You're right about adding a cap across the top leg of the bias voltage divider.
I left it bare to see how good a PSRR it might have.
Turned out to be pretty good.

H&H published some interesting noise comparisons of the ZTX851.
The 1/f looks pretty good...

Image

Image

See also: https://www.proaudiodesignforum.com/for ... ?f=6&t=980
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Re: A Low Noise Balanced In Moving Coil Preamp Using the ZTX

Post by JR. »

The 2sd786 is the npn version of the 2sb737 pnp I used in my phono preamp. As I recall the pnp 737 was "slightly" lower noise than the 786, which is why I used it when given a choice. Peavey already had the 2sd786 in their system when I was hired so I just used that in my mic preamps instead of bringing in yet another part number for a fraction of a dB NF improvement.

The 786 looks pretty respectable in that comparison, especially considering that it's from the '70s and obsolete now.

BTW I still haven't found my private stash of 737s... :oops: I must have put them somewhere very safe, hidden from myself.

JR

PS.. RIAA only defines down to 20Hz (used to be 30Hz) and IEC adds a one pole roll-off at 7950 uSec so that 1/F noise looks manageable. Back in the bad old days Peavey had their own house number version of 5532 selected for noise spectrum... not max noise voltage but something like the ratio of noise at 30Hz vs 1kHz. As I recall it pretty effectively selected out process noise problems that sounded bad to customers in WFO listening tests. High process-1/F noise, sounds like an IC fixin to blow up... :lol:
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Re: A Low Noise Balanced In Moving Coil Preamp Using the ZTX

Post by ricardo »

ricardo wrote:They did have small Rbb' but you had to select for 1/f noise.
Should point out that the killer with these medium power devices was popcorn noise (like you had on LM4562 et al) rather than strict 1/f

But my small experience suggested that in 1980, they were correlated for these devices.

AoE 3rd Ed. :o The Eagle has landed! Dis beach bum might have to get a proper job so he can buy books. :D :D

ztx851 looks like Rbb' <2R so would beat the old Toshiba & Rohm champions for LoZ LN

Especially as 35+ yrs on, they seem to have cracked popcorn & 1/f noise. ;)

John, there was a time in the late 70's when Philips NE5534AN, the guaranteed LN version was in short supply. We set up a test rig to select common or garden 5534s for critical applications.

We found ALL the Philips cheapo 5534s easily met the higher 5534AN LN spec. I must have tested at least 100 myself.

10 yrs later, I sallied once again into electronics but found this situation no longer held. 5532/4s were no longer hand carved by Virgins in the Philips Southampton, UK factory :( and if anything, they were all slightly noisier. But the good news is that new stuff like NJM2068 now enable similar or better LN.
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Re: A Low Noise Balanced In Moving Coil Preamp Using the ZTX

Post by mediatechnology »

WRT popcorn noise:

I did listen to the noise floor of the ZTX851 moving coil preamp specifically for popcorn noise and it was smooth as silk.
I haven't tried a large number of devices but the four I pulled out of the bag all worked. (For comparison I couldn't find a single LME49720 or LME49860 in my stash that didn't have popcorn noise.)
H&H also found good device consistency for the ZTX851 and ZTX951.

I have a few samples of the 2SB737 that Al Burdick gave me from the Benchmark Media days in his Garland garage.
I should turn the test circuit upside down for PNPs and compare the 2SB737 to the ZTX951.
H&H also gave the ZTX951 PNP a slight edge for lower rbb.

I have a few days worth of work on the bench to do but when I finish I'll fire the test circuit back up and post some FFTs of the ZTX851, ZTX951 and 2SB737 noise.

What was really cool was that the ZTX851 front-end was equally quiet with the OPA1612 as it was with the NJM2068.
The NJM2114 was a couple of dB higher due to its higher voltage noise.
The NJM2068DD datasheet can't be directly compared to the NJM2114 or most any other op amp because it's datasheet noise specification has RIAA weighting.
But the 2068 has got to be in the <<3nV/sqrtHz category to compare better than the 2114 and as good as the OPA1612.
I don't think I'd use the NJM2068s due to their lower bandwidth in this circuit but they provide a very low cost option.
The OPA1612s on a DIP adapter are about $14.

In addition to the bypass electolytic John suggested I wonder if I should add some base-emitter capacitors or differential capacitive termination.
I never saw any tendency for it to oscillate but the impedances are so low and the opportunity for a base stopper resistor non-existant due to its noise contribution there ought to be something to prevent VHF oscillation.
A couple of B-E caps from 100-680 pF might help. They wouldn't affect CMRR because they're bootstrapped.
The real test is to feed it with a MC cart at the end of cable. Though there's not a lot of inductance compared to a MM there's some.
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Re: A Low Noise Balanced In Moving Coil Preamp Using the ZTX

Post by JR. »

While I don't expect input noise current to be much of a problem in a MC preamp it might reveal a larger difference between the purpose engineered low noise devices (with higher beta) and re-purposed low Rbb devices. A revealing test might be to look for the total noise difference between input shorted and input terminated with fixed resistance (or a cart).

Those devices might be nice for a ribbon mic preamp too.

JR
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Re: A Low Noise Balanced In Moving Coil Preamp Using the ZTX

Post by ricardo »

JR. wrote:While I don't expect input noise current to be much of a problem in a MC preamp it might reveal a larger difference between the purpose engineered low noise devices (with higher beta) and re-purposed low Rbb devices. A revealing test might be to look for the total noise difference between input shorted and input terminated with fixed resistance (or a cart).
Don't think it would make much difference with most MC cartridges but now that you mention it ...

the 1/f 'knee' and popcorn noise is more evident/serious in Eni compared to Env on the datasheets of most LN devices.

IIRC, I just pulled out my shorting plug so I was 'listening' to either shorted or OC noise when selecting the medium power devices .. but it was 35+ yrs ago so I might be pontification from the wrong orifice :lol:
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