But when the usage is debased, they get misused and confusing, and we have to revert to longer ways to describe what we mean. Well chosen and consistently used names are a useful shorthand. It describes the picture it makes very well, rather than describing the behaviour, and brooks no confusion with a totem pole, which was named after the picture it made.ĭon't get hung up on names, it's the behaviour of the circuit that matters. A better name for a push-pull output stage would be a 'see-saw' configuration. However it grates to those who use the 'old terms' 'correctly'. It's how language develops, it might even catch on. I'm sympathetic to the mistake, I might even have used words like that when explaining the how and why of a totem pole output to somebody. It's likely the person has heard the term push-pull, and their first exposure to a circuit that had a 'drive in both directions' sort of behaviour was a totem pole. They are totally different circuit used in totally different situations. I can understand why somebody might describe a totem pole output stage as a push-pull, but most people call it a totem pole. The configuration you've shown is the prototypical 'push-pull' arrangement.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |