1 / 23

DSP Effects Guitar Amplifier

DSP Effects Guitar Amplifier. Rob Hermonat Greg Mucha Lucian Popa. Project Overview. Emulate sought-after tube/analog distortion found in various guitar amplifiers through the use of a DSP

keiki
Télécharger la présentation

DSP Effects Guitar Amplifier

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DSP Effects Guitar Amplifier Rob Hermonat Greg Mucha Lucian Popa

  2. Project Overview • Emulate sought-after tube/analog distortion found in various guitar amplifiers through the use of a DSP • Develop digital signal processing stage to emulate various brands/types of amplifiers (Fender, Marshall, Mesa Boogie & Roland) & create sound effects to enhance musical signal • Design and PCB layout of class D amplifier

  3. Project Block Diagram

  4. Digital Signal Processing • Converts analog signal into discrete sequence of numerical values • Use of computational algorithms for signal manipulation • Limitless possibilities for signal/sound effects • Relied heavily upon in music/movie industry

  5. DSP Based Effects • Equalization and Linear Effects (Reverberation and Delay) • Non-Linear: Tube Modeling

  6. Comparison Between Filters

  7. 5-Band Equalizer Design

  8. Why DSP? Analog is expensive and heavy

  9. Schetzen Formula

  10. Amplifier Considerations • Vacuum tubes (larger, high power consumption, shorter lifespan) • Class A (10-20% efficiency) • Class B (High efficiency/crossover distortion) • Class AB (35-55% efficiency, very common design) • Class D (Up to 90% efficiency/low distortion, new full-range audio designs)

  11. Class D Amplifiers • Full audible range amplifier (20-20kHz) • High efficiency • Low current (power) consumption • Low thermal by-product (small heatsinks) • Small footprint (compact designs)

  12. Class D Schematic

  13. Design Considerations • Quality of Sound • Cost • Availability of Parts • EMC Issues • Aesthetics • Portability • Feasibility

  14. DSP Features • 24-bit Symphony DSPB56371 Digital Signal Processor, 180 (MIPS) at 180 MHz core clock • Powered by USB bus voltage or external power adaptor (6-8 VAC or 8-10 VDC) • On-board USB interface that provides JTAG debug, I2C and SPI serial communication with the DSP • 3x AK4556 24-bit 192kHz stereo codecs • On-board microphone and pre-amplifier

  15. Specifications • Output Power 60 Watts RMS (8Ω Load) • 80-90% Efficiency at Full Power • THD (Total Harmonic Distortion) < .1 • DSP Sampling Rate 48 kHz • Maximize Execution Speed Through DSP Portion to Prevent Lag Times (Real-Time I/O)

  16. Class D PCB Layout • 2 Layer board • Flooded ground plane (top and bottom) • ExpressPCB Software • “Standard board” (No silkscreen or solder mask)

  17. Class D Amplification Stage • Gain of amplification stage • Buffering stage = 6 dB (at maximum volume) • Differential op-amp stage = 7 dB • Class D chip amplification = 23 dB • Total amplification: 23+6+7=36 dB ( about 63x) • Heat dissipation calculation • P = ( Tj – Ta ) / Rja. Where Rja = Rjc + Rch + Rha) • Tj=150 C; Ta = 50 C; Rjc= 2.52; Rch=1; Rha = 4.7 • Pmax = 12.14W

  18. Freescale Symphony Soundbite™

  19. Conclusions • Learning curve for using DSP much larger than expected • Mapping of A/D and D/A more important than resolution • Tube modeling and Class D combination result in improvements in size, weight, efficiency and reliability • Digital filters can be a cost-effective alternative to analog filters • Cascade 2nd order sections for more attenuation • Class D amp IC’s drastically reduce footprint although device size is still restricted by the size of the heat sink

  20. Questions/Comments?

More Related