1:21 "...people on the internet are not good at explaining things" would make a great bumper sticker. But you are excellent at explaining things. Thank you for these videos; they're helping me learn!
Thanks for that nice video. I've made that circuit on a breadboard with a BC547 NPN transistor and a small 8 ohms/0.5W speaker, using the audio output of a DVD player, and well, that works ! That's fun ! I can clearly hear the sound, though it's rather distortionned.
Bud I wish your videos were around when I was at uni 20 years ago, you have such a good way of explaining this. I was considering making a video the same but I know I would get lost in the academic voodoo of it all, you explain things in a way due to my training I could not do.. I hope that students happen upon you so they can have a practical application explanation, thank you for your content bud I am sure it will help many
Part 2 is th-cam.com/video/oaMco2BZMmw/w-d-xo.html and part 3 is th-cam.com/video/XFku7zvTiX8/w-d-xo.html which finish the explanation of that particular one. And I definitely will make more amplifier videos of several different kinds (including a proper a/b) whenever I get my lazy butt in gear and get back to video production.
Great explanation, 2-thumbs-up, 👍👍 But NOBODY can hear 0.002% distortion, it's almost impossible to measure, and especially when your Speakers have in excess of ~10% of very audible distortion.
1:21 "...people on the internet are not good at explaining things" would make a great bumper sticker. But you are excellent at explaining things. Thank you for these videos; they're helping me learn!
Clear as rock's water
I think you are one of the best I have seen anywhere online.
Thank you for explaining it so clearly and simply.
Thanks for that nice video.
I've made that circuit on a breadboard with a BC547 NPN transistor and a small 8 ohms/0.5W speaker, using the audio output of a DVD player, and well, that works ! That's fun !
I can clearly hear the sound, though it's rather distortionned.
Excellent videos.
Bud I wish your videos were around when I was at uni 20 years ago, you have such a good way of explaining this. I was considering making a video the same but I know I would get lost in the academic voodoo of it all, you explain things in a way due to my training I could not do.. I hope that students happen upon you so they can have a practical application explanation, thank you for your content bud I am sure it will help many
Another Beautifully put video A+++
teacher from heaven sorry electronic heaven
What is the meaning of bias?
Nice video! Do you already have the second and third part available? (And do you plan on making a video of a class a/b amplifier?)
Part 2 is th-cam.com/video/oaMco2BZMmw/w-d-xo.html and part 3 is th-cam.com/video/XFku7zvTiX8/w-d-xo.html which finish the explanation of that particular one. And I definitely will make more amplifier videos of several different kinds (including a proper a/b) whenever I get my lazy butt in gear and get back to video production.
Haha nice! Thanks for your answer. I could not find the videos.
Great explanation, 2-thumbs-up, 👍👍
But NOBODY can hear 0.002% distortion, it's almost impossible to measure,
and especially when your Speakers have in excess of ~10% of very audible distortion.
Thanks