Claims
- 1. A foreground music system for coverage of a large acoustic environment such as a restaurant or retail store, the system being responsive to electrical input signals from a source thereof such as a tape player, comprising:
- a plurality of at least six (6) low impedance speakers of approximately eight (8) ohms resistance each, wired in parallel, such that the effective impedance of the plurality of speakers as a whole is substantially less than eight ohms, said speakers being located at selected points throughout said acoustic environment and arranged to form a speaker array which provides substantially uniform sound coverage of said acoustic environment;
- a single current-limited signal amplifier having a low voltage, high current output for amplifying the electrical input signals and applying the amplified signals to said plurality of speakers for reproduction thereof, said current amplifier including a negative feedback circuit which reduces the output impedance of the signal amplifier to approximately that of the effective impedance of said plurality of speakers, wherein the output voltage from the signal amplifier is sufficiently low and the output current is sufficiently high that adequate power is available to drive said plurality of speakers without a voltage transformer at the output of the signal amplifier;
- means directly coupling the output of the signal amplifier simultaneously to all of said low impedance speakers in the speaker array without any impedance-matching transformers or other impedance-matching means;
- amplifier protection means for monitoring just the distortion component, if any, of the output signal from the signal amplifier and for developing an error signal therefrom, the error signal having an amplitude directly related to the amplitude of said distortion component, the amplifier protection means including a feedback circuit for attenuating the electrical input signals with said error signal so as to restrict the operation of the signal amplifier to its linear mode and maintain the output of the signal amplifier substantially at its maximum average operating level, thereby preventing overdriving and subsequent damage to the signal amplifier.
- 2. An apparatus of claim 1, wherein the signal amplifier comprises an operational amplifier having inverting and non-inverting inputs, wherein input signals to the operational amplifier are provided to the inverting input thereof, wherein the amplifier protection means includes a feedback line from the output of the operational amplifier to the inverting input thereof, wherein the voltage at the inverting input of the operational amplifier remains at substantially zero volts as long there is no distortion component present in the output signal, wherein a feedback voltage signal is developed at the inverting input of the operational amplifier representative of any distortion component of the output signal as the output signal begins to distort, and wherein the amplifier protection means includes an error amplifier means for amplifying the feedback voltage signal and converting the feedback voltage signal into a DC error voltage, wherein the signal amplifier includes a preamplifier and wherein the DC error voltage is transmitted to the preamplifier to reduce the input signals to the operational amplifier, so as to maintain the output of the operational amplifier at substantially its maximum operating level, without overdriving the operational amplifier.
Parent Case Info
This application is a continuation of Ser. No. 06/726,051, filed 04/23/85, now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (16)
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
| Number |
Date |
Country |
| 0135553 |
May 1979 |
DDX |
| 556999 |
Feb 1957 |
ITX |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
| Entry |
| National Semiconductor, Linear Data, 1976, LM384, and Linear Applications, AN69-3 (LM380). |
| Lancaster, TTL Cookbook, 1980, p. 168. |
Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
| Parent |
726051 |
Apr 1985 |
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