This is a design circuit for audio graphic equalizers, that are very common as commercial products but circuits for them are very rarely published. This circuit is a simple design circuit. The circuit is need an op-amp for amplifying the input signal. This is the figure of the circuit.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgm0AIW551rVnWJACXlzDI5e9CrbTEcxYQZtxB_9_WFEk_FUc81KGKAbyCOsbAk_1rtHGWl1c3h7Gc9absad-b6ukfPPDzsZjX0SXJf8ZEXrfrEzuv3huXpjXZWFrExoeuCJbvUK77sS8U/s400/Untitled-1.jpg)
Only one gyrator stage is shown: all 7 gyrators are the same circuit, 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 circuit 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 circuit 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 circuit. Note that this includes 3 terms, the first purely resistive, the second is the capacitive contribution from C1 and the third is an inductive term from the gyrator.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgm0AIW551rVnWJACXlzDI5e9CrbTEcxYQZtxB_9_WFEk_FUc81KGKAbyCOsbAk_1rtHGWl1c3h7Gc9absad-b6ukfPPDzsZjX0SXJf8ZEXrfrEzuv3huXpjXZWFrExoeuCJbvUK77sS8U/s400/Untitled-1.jpg)
Only one gyrator stage is shown: all 7 gyrators are the same circuit, 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 circuit 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 circuit 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 circuit. Note that this includes 3 terms, the first purely resistive, the second is the capacitive contribution from C1 and the third is an inductive term from the gyrator.
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