Can Some1 Tell How can I construct a simple Amplifier Using BJT Which Gives 80 gain

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Can Some1 Tell How can I construct a simple Amplifier Using BJT Which Gives 80 gain . yeah the frequency range should be atleast 1000 hertz ....... i can use Common collector , Common emitter , Common Base (transistors), resisitors of course and capacitors .....Sounds like everything...........Anyways can Some1 Give me the circuit or atleast tell me how to construct 1

Regards, Arafat Safdar

Reply to
attractivearafat

Did you look for any?

Reply to
Tom Biasi

Yeah I guess I did I have used 2n3904 transistor but i cant fiqure out a way to construct it .... My circuit is not giving any gain

Regards, Arafat Safdar

Biasi wrote:

Reply to
attractivearafat

Are you looking for a voltage gain of 80?

What are the amplifier signal source impedance and load impedance? The simplest, ideal case, would be a zero ohm source and an infinite ohm load.

Is there a lower frequency or must the gain go all the way to DC?

i can use Common collector , Common emitter , Common Base

Achieving a voltage gain of 80 from a single transistor is a lot harder than getting a voltage gain of 9 or so from each of two transistor stages.

I think you should start with some basic amplifier tutorials:

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Reply to
John Popelish

A *voltage* gain of 80 ?

That's not a problem at all.

Common collector ( more usually called emitter follower ) has no voltage gain. Common base is normally just used for RF. Common emitter is the obvious choice here.

A basic common emitter circuit is very simple but before going any further it'll be necessary to know the following.

What's the.....

Supply voltage Typical or maximum input volthage. Source impedance Load impedance ?

Note - this will be AC coupled - i.e. not a DC amplifier.

Graham

Reply to
Eeyore

Please show us your circuit, and describe how you think it works. That will give us two starting points, a given circuit, and a given mind.

If you don't have a way to display the circuit somewhere on the web that you can link us to, you can draw a schematic and post it here with this tool:

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Reply to
John Popelish

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