No as it powers headphones that is more of a current amplifying device. I have used devices like this shown below for line level voltage amplification, for your use I would include a mid range potentiometer on the front end as well. you may also need to play around with the two resistors used in the feed -back loop so as to obtain a good clean signal of correct gain, in the format shown the input resistor value is fairly low as it is used in this example to work with the low milliwatt out-put from a standard microphone. Swapping this for a higher value means the main feed-back resistor has to increase proportionally to obtain the same gain.
It appears the design changed, as there are some different pictures of this kit.
There are other suppliers:- Quasar electronics (PDF available to look at)
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1024MAK wrote:It appears the design changed, as there are some different pictures of this kit.
There are other suppliers:- Quasar electronics (PDF available to look at)
Plus others...
Mark
Quasar is where I normally buy from.
The Quaser pictured board is a P1803'2 (discontinued by Vellemem I believe) which uses an LM358 dual op-amp wired in mono as opposed to the 741 used in the K1803 so not the same thing, but this is all not really important as the K1803 you get from Quasar is the one I first posted and the PDF schematic reflects this so can only assume the P1803'2 was sent out to get rid of stock of a discontinued product hence the picture or in place of out of stock K1803s or even pictured in error.
Although they are nice kits I do tend to find they are a bit "one-dab-with-the-iron" when soldering and do not like a lot of reworking(track-pad lifting etc) but are well worth the brass when compared to the cost of own design, etching, component buying etc.
mahjongg wrote:you can try implementing the mic pre-amplifier I've built into my ZX81 clone, which is working well.
So the ZX81 connected to the left, and the tape to the right?
Err, I think there may be some crossed wires here
Martin is wanting to amplify the tape output signal from the ZX81.
The diagram that mahjongg posted is to amplify the input in to the computer.
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Is there any map on the Internet which lists differences between these transistors (so I can see which might be replaced by others), so I would not have to read every single datasheet and make the mapping myself?
Normally the transistors used are general purpose transistors and normally needed to be classified as NPN or PNP transistor (most important), voltage range, frequency response/bandwith, case and pin out and amplification. Last one most are sorted as A/B/C types while C has higher amplification as standard A. There may exist kind of compatibility tables but I prefer to use parametric search or use standard transistors like
BC547/BC847 as NPN
or BC557/BC857 as PNP (not sure if BC857 exists, but I guess).
Standby alert
There are four lights!
Step up to red alert. Sir, are you absolutely sure? It does mean changing the bulb
Looking forward to summer later in the year.
mahjongg wrote:you can try implementing the mic pre-amplifier I've built into my ZX81 clone, which is working well.
So the ZX81 connected to the left, and the tape to the right?
Err, I think there may be some crossed wires here
Martin is wanting to amplify the tape output signal from the ZX81.
The diagram that mahjongg posted is to amplify the input in to the computer.
Mark
yes, indeed, if you want a louder ZX81 output signal, I would simply change R27 to something a bit more than 1K, No transistors needed! The ZX81 attenuates its mic signal by about a factor 1000 (1Meg versus 1K) so its output is very small, (about 5mV) so as to not overload the very sensitive microphone inputs of tape recorders, but a bit more signal should be better nowadays. my own cassette output circuit looks like this: