This application claims the priority benefits of Japan Patent Application No. 2019-239930, filed on Dec. 27, 2019. The entirety of the above-mentioned patent application is hereby incorporated by reference herein and made a part of this specification.
The present disclosure relates to an amplifier for a music signal and a method of outputting a waveform of a music signal.
Conventionally, it has become known that a circuit simulating the electrical characteristics of a vacuum tube can be applied to a guitar amplifier, and a technique for simulating the input and output characteristics characteristic to a vacuum tube amplifier is known (see, for example, Patent Document 1). In addition, an invention simulating the distortion impression characteristic to a vacuum tube amplifier by adjusting a filter multiplier according to the level of a guitar input signal has been proposed (see, for example, Patent Document 2).
[Patent Document 1] Japanese Examined Patent Application, Second Publication No. S59-051167
[Patent Document 2] Japanese Patent No. 3336089
In the related art, even when the shape of a waveform of a vacuum tube amplifier can be simulated, a waveform exceeding a power supply voltage cannot be output.
The disclosure provides an amplifier capable of outputting a waveform of a music signal exceeding a power supply voltage.
According to an embodiment, there is provided an amplifier comprising a power supply, an input terminal for a music signal, an amplifying circuit which amplifies the music signal using the power supply, and a circuit which is connected to an output end of the amplifying circuit and outputs a waveform exceeding a voltage value of the power supply.
The circuit is, for example, a jumping-up circuit.
For the amplifier, a configuration in which an output end of the jumping-up circuit is connected to a speaker load in series may be adopted. In addition, for the circuit in the amplifier, a configuration including a jumping-up control circuit that controls an output waveform of the circuit may be adopted.
In addition, a configuration in which the jumping-up circuit in the amplifier is a resonance circuit including an inductive load and a capacitive load may be adopted. In addition, a configuration in which the jumping-up circuit is a resonance circuit including an inductive load, a first capacitive load, and a rectifying element connected between the inductive load and the capacitive load may be adopted. In addition, a configuration in which the jumping-up circuit is a resonance circuit including an inductive load, a first capacitive load, a second capacitive load including a damping element, and a rectifying element connected between the inductive load and the first capacitive load may be adopted.
Hereinafter, an embodiment of an amplifying circuit will be described with reference to the drawings. A configuration of the embodiment is an example, and the disclosure is not limited thereto.
In
A speaker load 30 is connected to an output terminal t2 of the amplifier. The speaker load 30 includes a resistor R5 which is a pure resistance component of a speaker unit and a parasitic induction component L2. For the speaker unit, a speaker unit adopted for a general guitar amplifier is assumed.
A jumping-up circuit 20 (first jumping-up circuit) is inserted between the amplifying circuit 10 and the output terminal t2. That is, a signal from the amplifying circuit 10 passes through the jumping-up circuit 20 and is then connected to the speaker load 30. The jumping-up circuit 20 is a resonance circuit including a coil L1 which is a inductive load and capacitors C1 and C2 which are capacitive loads, in the example illustrated in
(1) A waveform jumps up particularly greatly (an overshoot occurs) during rising and falling of the waveform.
(2) A peak voltage value (peak value) of jumping-up is a value larger than a power supply voltage.
As an input signal (e1) for the amplifier illustrated in
With respect to an input waveform, an output waveform of the jumping-up circuit generates a resonance wave (ringing) having a plurality of peaks during rising and falling of the waveform. A peak value of a first peak including resonance exceeds a power supply voltage (±40 V), and a so-called jumping-up effect is generated. This is because resonance occurs due to L1 and (C1+C2) during rising and falling of a waveform.
However, as illustrated in
An output waveform shown in a third part from the top in
However, in the output waveform of the jumping-up circuit 20A, peaks after the second peak is occurred (ringing occurred) following the overshooting of the first peak and the undershooting of the first peak, and thus a waveform in which one overshooting or undershooting occurs as in an output waveform of a vacuum tube amplifier (
An output waveform shown in a fourth part (a lowermost part) from the top in
In addition, as compared with the jumping-up circuit 20 and 20A, hardly any swing width after the overshooting and undershooting of the first peak is generated in the jumping-up circuit 20B, and thus it can be said that ringing does not occur. That is, a waveform close to an output waveform of a vacuum tube amplifier is obtained.
After the overshooting of the first peak, the resonance between the coil L1 and the capacitor C1 induces undershooting of the first peak and the second and subsequent peaks. However, the capacitor C2 is charged with a delay charge, and thus the occurrence of undershooting of the first peak and peaks after the second peak and the subsequent induced due to the resonance of the coil L1 and the capacitor C1 is suppressed by an integration circuit constituted by the resistor R3 and the capacitor C2.
Meanwhile, an electronic inductive load or an electronic capacitive load constituted by an electronic circuit and the like may be applied instead of the coil L and the capacitor C. As described above, according to the jumping-up circuits 20, 20A, and 20B of the amplifier 1 according to the embodiment, it is possible to obtain an output waveform causing overshooting and undershooting which exceed a power supply voltage in response to rising and falling of an input pulse using the jumping-up circuit. In addition, according to the jumping-up circuits 20A or 20B, it is possible to obtain an output waveform approximating to an output waveform of a vacuum tube amplifier by suppressing ringing. The configurations described in the embodiment can be appropriately combined within a range that does not deviate from the objective.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2019-239930 | Dec 2019 | JP | national |