[sdiy] Translinear circuits

Pete Hartman pete.hartman at gmail.com
Wed Aug 7 17:43:25 CEST 2013


And with that it's apparent that I'm well out of my depth :-)

I appreciate the reference, I hope to get to that level eventually, so
it is definitely useful :-D

I guess I was expecting the possibility of more macro-scale applications.

Thanks!

Pete



On Wed, Aug 7, 2013 at 10:10 AM, Neil Johnson <neil.johnson71 at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On 7 August 2013 16:03, cheater00 . <cheater00 at gmail.com> wrote:
>> Neil,
>> apparently the archives don't work at the moment. Would you be kind
>> enough to paste in the original post or at least the name of the book?
>
> Oh dear.  Here is the book recommendation:
>
> ==============================================
>
> To: SDIY List
> From: Phil Macphail
> cc:
> Subject: Re: [sdiy] Discrete OTAs - (was - Best CA3280 projects?)
> Date: Mon, 02 Jul 2012 21:29:12 +0100
>
> This book is probably the best, reasonably priced, reference for this kind
> of thing -
>
> Analogue IC Design: The Current-Mode Approach
>
> Editor(s): C. Toumazou, F. J. Lidgey, D. G. Haigh
> Published: 1993
> Print ISBN13: 9780863412974
> eISBN: 9781849191647
>
> If you are a member of the IET then it is a bargain - essential reading
> for bipolar analogue design, and covers techniques that are not covered
> elsewhere. It's not for beginners who want circuits to copy, but for a
> thorough grounding in all the translinear techniques (such as the
> linearising diodes, mirrors, current conveyors etc.) it can't be beaten.
>
> Not bad for a book that's 20 years old!
>
> Phil.
>
> ==============================================
>
> --
> --
> http://www.njohnson.co.uk



More information about the Synth-diy mailing list