Monday, August 18, 2014

Simple Audio Graphic Equaliser

Audio graphic equalizers are very common as commercial products (for Hi-fi, car audio and stage use) but diagram for them are very rarely published. I didnt design this one but its really very simple. The details shown are for a 7 band but the principle can be extended to almost any number of bands - if you can find accurate enough components. 


Audio

Only one gyrator stage is shown: all 7 gyrators are the same schema, only the capacitors change, as shown in the chart. I have shown three of the seven faders to show where they go. 

A gyrator is a schema using active devices and transistors to simulate an inductor. In this case the gyrator is the transistor acting with R1, R3 and C2. It could just as easily be a unity gain op-amp. 

The schema includes three formulae: one which gives f, the the centre frequency of the band. The second shows how the Q is related to the capacitor ratio. The third shows the impedance presented by the schema. Note that this includes 3 terms, the first purely resistive, the second is the capacitative contribution from C1 and the third is an inductive term from the gyrator. 

If anyone wants the detailed mathematical working out of these formulae, I might be induced to post it (donations accepted!). The mathematics for active filters is not as difficult as most tutors tend to make it and I really didnt understand it properly until I worked it out for myself and found that it wasnt complicated, I just hadnt been taught how to understand it! 

If you do the maths for this you will find the actual frequencies are actually a little different from the target frequencies shown in the diagram: thats what comes from using standard values. Audibly they are plenty close enough. 

The rest of the schema is simply an op-amp. If you consider a tuned schema (the gyrator) hanging from the pot slider, it is being connected either to the positive input or the negative to a variable extent. One will increase the response at the turned frequency and the other will decrease it. 

You must of course chose a good, low noise op-amp: when we manufactured these we used 741s but we selected low noise ones. The transistors also need to be low noise, but you can easily change a noisy transistor if you find you have one. 

And thats about it. A very simple, effective schema. The most difficult bit is going to be sourcing the components - particularly suitable fader pots!.

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