Pre-amplifier circuit description 
 
 
The A85 preamplifier is a high-performance, DC coupled design 
with microprocessor control of input select, two independent tape 
loops, electronic volume control, tone bypass and electronic tone 
control. 
 
It features a discrete power supply and low-noise linear circuitry to 
obtain very good distortion and noise performance, suitable for 
high quality source material such as CD or DVD-A. 
 
 
Input switching 
 
Each of the inputs has a pair of diodes to the ±15V rails to prevent 
static spikes from causing damage to the CMOS multiplexers. In 
addition, there is a simple resistor-capacitor filter with a corner 
frequency of approximately 340kHz to remove any unwanted high 
frequency interference from the signal. This uses high-quality 
polypropylene capacitors for best performance. 
 
Z104 and Z105 are the main input select multiplexers, which are 
configured in a ‘virtual earth’ unity gain arrangement with Z115 
and Z116. This arrangement is slightly lower distortion than the 
‘normal’ one, at the cost of a slightly higher noise floor. It is an 
inverting configuration, which is restored to correct polarity by the 
inverting electronic volume control which follows. 
 
Z115B and Z116B are integrating servos, which take out any DC 
from the input signal before the following stages. The servos are 2-
pole, with a passive 2
nd
 pole being formed by R180 and C147 (for 
the left channel) to remove broadband noise from the output of the 
servo and improve speed of response. 
 
Z100 thru Z103 are the input selectors for the 2 tape loops. These 
are normal non-inverting selectors which are buffered before being 
passed on to the phono sockets. 
 
Z109A output is decoupled by R108 which is included in the 
feedback path. Local high frequency feedback occurs around C108 
to allow the tape loop output to be very low impedance, whilst 
being stable into a capacitive load such as may be presented by a 
screened interconnect cable. This is the same for all tape outputs. 
 
Z106 is configured as a double pole changeover switch, used to 
select the tone controls. The tone controls are bypassed when not 
required so that the noise and distortion can be minimised. 
 
 
Tone control circuit 
 
The tone control circuit is a non-inverting one, using a gyrated 
‘bell’ filter for the bass and a simple shelving filter for the treble. 
 
 
Left channel description 
 
The input is attenuated by 6dB and biased to a voltage of +2.5V 
DC by C111, R113, R112, R110, R111 and C110. This is so the 
signals fall within the 0 - 5VDC required by the digital 
potentiometer Z108. 
 
Z111B and its associated components form an active equivalent of 
a series resonant LCR circuit. This has an impedance minimum of 
5.4k at around 80Hz with Q=0.7 The reason the bass is done as a 
band-boost filter rather than a shelving filter is so that you can 
boost the ‘real’ bass without causing lots of sub-audio loudspeaker 
cone excursion which wastes power and may damage the drive 
units. 
 
The digital pots Z108D and Z108A control the bass and treble 
respectively. This is done by moving the wiper connected to the 
frequency-sensitive impedance between the non-inverting and 
inverting terminals of Z112A, effectively changing the ratio of 
feedback boost and feed-forward attenuation of the circuit at the 
desired frequencies, thus providing a EQ gain control that is 
symmetrical on a logarithmic scale, with the use of a linear pot. 
 
Z112B provides the 6dB of gain necessary to bring the nominal 
signal level back to unity. C116 and C117 remove the 2.5VDC 
offset from the output, to prevent clunks when the tone controls 
are activated. 
 
Z108 is controlled by a simple 3-wire serial interface from the 
microprocessor. Each of the digital lines has its own ground return 
to minimise electromagnetic interference. They are connected 
together only at the GND pin of the IC. 
 
 
Volume control 
 
Z107 is a VSDVC electronic volume control IC. It works, in 
conjunction with an external op-amp, by varying the feed-forward 
and feedback resistors in an inverting gain configuration.  In this 
way, it can allow output signal swings of up to 22Vpp whilst 
operating from a single +5VDC power supply. Also, it allows the 
user the choice of external circuitry to fine-tune the performance. 
The gain is controlled from the microprocessor via a 3-wire serial 
interface. The analogue supply rail is derived from the local +5V 
via R185 and C156 // C157. 
 
Z117 is the output op-amp. Its outputs are decoupled via R186, 
R187, C158 and C159 so that it has a low output impedance but 
can drive cable capacitance without oscillation. R186 and R187 
are included in the audio frequency feedback loop to reduce output 
impedance when driving ‘difficult’ cables. 
 
RLY100 is a mute relay which shunts the preamp output to 
ground. This is to prevent thumps and squeals when the units is 
powered up or down. 
 
 
Power supply  
 
The transformer winding is connected to SK300. The voltage is 
rectified and smoothed by D300, D301, D306, D307 and C300, 
C310. The unregulated voltage should be around ±27VDC. F300 
and F301 are secondary fuses, as the low power preamp winding 
would not blow the primary fuses if short circuited. 
 
The voltage regulators are discrete compound emitter followers. I 
will describe the +15V supply as the negative is essentially an 
exact mirror image. 
 
Q300 and R300 act as a constant current source, supplying around 
7mA into D310. C302 and C314 reduce ripple and broadband 
noise on the zener diode. Q305 and Q306 form a complementary 
Darlington NPN transistor which is configured as an emitter 
follower, producing the +15VDC at its output. C303 is to provide 
bulk charge storage and to reduce the AC output impedance of the 
power supply. D302 prevents reverse bias of the supply during 
power down. 
 
Z301 is a conventional LM317 type circuit to drop the +15V rail 
down to +5V for the tone and volume control circuits. 
 
Star point SP300 explicitly connects the differently named ground 
nets together at one point, to minimise hum.