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opamp question

Started by danwelsh, March 01, 2013, 11:43:28 PM

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danwelsh

Hi, I have a question regarding opamps...I have an english sustain pcb calling for 2 lm741's  ....I only have one but I also have a bunch of jrc4558s, and also have a lm386n, my question is should i use 2 4558s or the 2 lm chips? I'm going to socket anyway, will it hurt the circuit to interchange and try em?

jubal81

Neither of those will work. Pinouts won't match. In a pinch you could deadbug the 4558. (flip it upside down and solder wires from the pins to the right spot on the board)
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danwelsh

Quote from: jubal81 on March 01, 2013, 11:53:24 PM
Neither of those will work. Pinouts won't match. In a pinch you could deadbug the 4558. (flip it upside down and solder wires from the pins to the right spot on the board)

Thanks a million

danwelsh

couldn't i wire them up manually....know what i mean, with wires? and match the pinouts, that would work wouldn't it?

alanp

The main issue with regards to 4558/741 interchangeability is that the 4558 is a dual opamp, and the 741 is a single opamp. (The LM386 is something else, but I don't recall. Too much DB Export right now.)
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RobA

Quote from: danwelsh on March 02, 2013, 03:14:13 AM
couldn't i wire them up manually....know what i mean, with wires? and match the pinouts, that would work wouldn't it?
It depends on the circuit, and I don't know this circuit. The LM741 has offset null pins on it that might be used in a circuit. I can't see any reason that someone would use two single op-amps instead of a dual unless this were the case. Since this is a sustain pedal, it has high gain? This could be a reason for using the offset feature.

If the circuit doesn't use the offset null pins, then you could wire the pins of the dual op-amp to the right locations. You need to either use both of the op-amps on the dual or terminate the unused op-amp on the dual.
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danwelsh

Quote from: RobA on March 02, 2013, 02:11:11 PM
Quote from: danwelsh on March 02, 2013, 03:14:13 AM
couldn't i wire them up manually....know what i mean, with wires? and match the pinouts, that would work wouldn't it?
It depends on the circuit, and I don't know this circuit. The LM741 has offset null pins on it that might be used in a circuit. I can't see any reason that someone would use two single op-amps instead of a dual unless this were the case. Since this is a sustain pedal, it has high gain? This could be a reason for using the offset feature.

If the circuit doesn't use the offset null pins, then you could wire the pins of the dual op-amp to the right locations. You need to either use both of the op-amps on the dual or terminate the unused op-amp on the dual.

How would i terminate the op-amp on the dual?

RobA

The proper method and the reasons are talked about in the application note, Op Amps for Everyone, which is a great reference.

Basically, you feed half the supply voltage into the non-inverting input and tie the inverting input to the output. It will eliminate added noise and power consumption from the unused op amp.
Affiliations: Music Unfolding (musicunfolding.com), software based effects and Rock•it Frog (rock.it-frog.com), DIY effects (coming soon).