Eπίσης, από ότι φαίνεται έχει τελεστικό μεσα:
Λέει ένας που διάβασε το white paper του sabre:
''The case for current output mode is (according to footnote 16) to "cancel a slight on-chip resistor voltage coefficient"
The difference between voltage mode and current mode output stage is that in voltage mode the output connects to input of the opamp and in current mode output, the output connects to a resistor.
It seems then that the off chip resistor is the element canceling the voltage coefficient of the on-chip resistor.''
Αλλά ο russ απαντάει:
Sorry, but this is not correct.
Using it in current mode means using it into a low (as close to zero as possible) impedance. An opamp is typically used precisely to do this.
Using it in voltage mode means running it into a higher impedance (it does not have to be very high either
και του απαντά πάλι αυτός:
"Russ, that makes a lot of sense now. I was trying to make sense of footnote 16 of the white paper where it says current mode "cancels" an on chip voltage coefficient. I understood that as for example the on chip resistor has positive voltage coefficient, then the off chip resistors would have negative voltage coefficient and thus they would cancel. But if in current mode, the voltage stays constant, then there is no effect of voltage coefficient on the on chip resistors"
οι πιο έμπειροι ας διαφωτίσουν....
εδώ έχει κάποια papers πάντως
http://www.esstech.com/index.php?p=support_downloads
πχ [url]http://www.esstech.com/PDF/Sabre_8_2Channel_64PIN_V3_SCH.pdf
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