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FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?

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Mitchrx
Posted 2005-09-15 4:39 PM (#137253)
Subject: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
December 2003
Posts: 1071

Location: Carle Place, NY
Back in the mid 80's the Balladeers had the FET3 while the Legends had the OP24. Both look the same, 3 band eq with volume. Does anyone know what the differences are between the two?
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Mark in Boise
Posted 2005-09-15 6:41 PM (#137254 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
March 2005
Posts: 12750

Location: Boise, Idaho
I have one of each and I can't tell the difference, but the OP24 is on the Classic, so the sound is a lot different anyway.
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Beal
Posted 2005-09-15 7:28 PM (#137255 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?



Joined:
January 2002
Posts: 14127

Location: 6 String Ranch
OP had op amps that powered it and the FET had fet amps (field effect transistors, whatever they were) I recall the op24 having more dynamics. It basically is the same as the Magnum 2 electronics. I still like the sound of the OP24 but I'm just an old retired gas station fart living on a fixed income so wtf do I know?
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Jeff W.
Posted 2005-09-15 7:56 PM (#137256 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
November 2003
Posts: 11039

Location: Earth·SolarSystem·LocalInterstellarCloud·Local Bub
Shoulda taken a position on the board...
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Charlie Ramon
Posted 2005-09-16 4:28 AM (#137257 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
August 2004
Posts: 709

Location: Germany
The pics provide an insight in the preamp boxes. The upper one shows the FET3 with one field effect transistor. The lower pic shows the OP24 with his 6 operational amplifiers (the black bugs) each providing 24 transistors. From technical point of view the OP24 is the more advanced preamp. I agree to Bill, it has more dynamics - it sounds better!





Karl
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bauerhillboy
Posted 2005-09-16 6:07 AM (#137258 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
February 2004
Posts: 1634

Location: Warren,Pa.
What are "op" amps? Is that where all the names of the current amps come from? I've always wondered what that prefix meant.
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Mitchrx
Posted 2005-09-16 6:28 AM (#137259 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
December 2003
Posts: 1071

Location: Carle Place, NY
Karl:
Thanks for the pics and electronic analysis.
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Jeff
Posted 2005-09-16 9:00 AM (#137260 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
June 2002
Posts: 863

Location: Central Florida
Gee, all these years I just thought it stood for "Ovation preamp." :rolleyes:
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ChatMan
Posted 2005-09-16 9:25 AM (#137261 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
August 2004
Posts: 604

Location: Tampa, FL
BHB,
"Op amp" is an abbreviation for the term operational amplifier. In somewhat watered down terms, it refers to an electronic circuit that can be modeled as a chunk of gain with 'differential' inputs (quoted because, while they appear to be inversely related, they are missing much of the common mode rejection of a true Diff amp). You see them a lot because they are so convenient to design with and many are jelly bean cheap. I'm a little surprised to see them in an instrument preamp. In the 80's the rule of thumb was for low frequencies (DC - 1kHz) op amps were ok, but once you got into the upper midrange audio freqs, you had to go discrete for fidelity reasons. When I was last doing instrumentation design, mid nineties, there were a number of companies out there, Linear Technologies was my favorite, that were doing some pretty incredible things with linear IC's. LT had an engineer working for them, Jim Williams, that had a wonderfully twisted appreciation of electrical engineering. IMHO his best design was a light emitting pickle.

To return to topic, I think Jeff has a higher percentage chance of being right about the OP prefix. Although, the morphing of the FET preamp into an op-amp design lends credence to BHB suggestion. I guess you'd have to ask those model naming masters from marketing to get the definitive answer.
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Charlie Ramon
Posted 2005-09-16 12:23 PM (#137262 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
August 2004
Posts: 709

Location: Germany
The 1987 Ovation catalog says that each of the six operational amplifier of the OP24 has 24 transistors. So I think OP24 stands for "OPerational Amplifiers with 24 transistors each". But who knows?

Karl
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ChatMan
Posted 2005-09-16 12:36 PM (#137263 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
August 2004
Posts: 604

Location: Tampa, FL
kid-school

That's brilliant work...
you by any chance in marketing?

Really, it's as plausible as anything I'd have thought up.
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TexasDoc
Posted 2005-09-17 1:56 AM (#137264 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
December 2004
Posts: 1116

Location: Keller, TX
Originally posted by ChatMan:
BHB,
"Op amp" is an abbreviation for the term operational amplifier. In somewhat watered down terms, it refers to an electronic circuit that can be modeled as a chunk of gain with 'differential' inputs (quoted because, while they appear to be inversely related, they are missing much of the common mode rejection of a true Diff amp). You see them a lot because they are so convenient to design with and many are jelly bean cheap. I'm a little surprised to see them in an instrument preamp. In the 80's the rule of thumb was for low frequencies (DC - 1kHz) op amps were ok, but once you got into the upper midrange audio freqs, you had to go discrete for fidelity reasons. When I was last doing instrumentation design, mid nineties, there were a number of companies out there, Linear Technologies was my favorite, that were doing some pretty incredible things with linear IC's. LT had an engineer working for them, Jim Williams, that had a wonderfully twisted appreciation of electrical engineering. IMHO his best design was a light emitting pickle.

To return to topic, I think Jeff has a higher percentage chance of being right about the OP prefix. Although, the morphing of the FET preamp into an op-amp design lends credence to BHB suggestion. I guess you'd have to ask those model naming masters from marketing to get the definitive answer.
That's watered down???? I'd hate to see the concentrate!
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Charlie Ramon
Posted 2005-09-17 4:43 AM (#137265 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
August 2004
Posts: 709

Location: Germany
Chatman,
you're a keen observer of human nature! Right, I was employed in technical marketing for the semiconductors industry in Sunnyvale, CA. But that was in my younger days.
Karl
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bauerhillboy
Posted 2005-09-17 4:44 AM (#137266 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
February 2004
Posts: 1634

Location: Warren,Pa.
That's the kind of answer I appreciate. I just printed it so I can spend the rest of the week absorbing the information! Thanks ChatMan.
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BruDeV
Posted 2005-09-17 5:42 PM (#137267 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
January 2003
Posts: 1498

Location: San Bernardino, California
Hey ChatMan, how about a SED (smoke emitting diode)?
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MWoody
Posted 2005-09-17 5:46 PM (#137268 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?



Joined:
December 2003
Posts: 13984

Location: Upper Left USA
Why do I suddenly have a sinking sensation in my stomach?
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BruDeV
Posted 2005-09-17 6:47 PM (#137269 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
January 2003
Posts: 1498

Location: San Bernardino, California
Sniff, sniff, is that smoke I smell?
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ChatMan
Posted 2005-09-19 9:56 AM (#137270 - in reply to #137253)
Subject: Re: FET3 and OP24- What makes them different?


Joined:
August 2004
Posts: 604

Location: Tampa, FL
Oh man BruDev... don't tell me you installed batteries in the Woodman's PD preamp :eek:
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