Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jul 9, 2026

OCL amplifier

An OCL amplifier is any audio amplifier with direct-coupled capacitorless output. Typically, OCL amplifiers can be any of several amplifier classes, and typically have a push–pull output stage.

Last revised
Jul 9, 2026
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An OCL amplifier (output capacitor-less amplifier) is any audio amplifier with direct-coupled capacitorless output. Typically, OCL amplifiers can be any of several amplifier classes, and typically have a push–pull output stage.1

Advantages of OCL amplifiers over capacitor-coupled amplifiers include

  • Avoiding the cost and bulk of an output capacitor
  • Better immunity to motorboat oscillation
  • Greater output power at very low frequencies and DC

Disadvantages of OCL amplifiers include

  • Larger power dissipation and passing DC through the load, in the minority of designs with poorly controlled DC bias point
  • Increased sensitivity of the output DC bias point to process variations, although the last disadvantage is less important for older bipolar processes.

Implementations

References

References

  1. "OCL Amplifier Explained". Homemade Circuit Projects. 5 May 2022. Retrieved 11 February 2025.