My end goal is to understand how to design a circuit similar to this one, in order to achieve a dc q point of about 2.5V, and amplify a ~50mVpp input with a 10k impedance, to a maximum output of about 3.5Vpp into an 8 ohm speaker, adjustable with a pot.
Quiescent point is easy enough:
V(out) = Vbe(Q1)·(R2+R3)/R3 + Ib(Q1)·R2. Reason is, that's the point where divided output voltage will turn on Q1 and stop further rise of output voltage due to R1. For 2.5V you will probably end up with roughly R2 = 2.5·R3, but watch out for base current.
This circuit runs open loop, there's gonna be no feedback at AC. Reason is, C1 reactance isn't flat with frequency (to put it mildly), so it has to be made negligible in comparison with all the resistances over the bandwidth of interest. Then, the input signal drives the base directly, overriding feedback through R2. Feedback will only be effective at DC where C1 reactance is high. It will set the quiescent point, as above.
Considering the lack of effective feedback, all AC input voltage will appear at the base of Q1, and input impedance is simply parallel impedance of all the components present there:
R3 || R2/gain || 1/gm(Q1)·β. R3 is obvious, I hope, but R2 appears lower in value because for each 1mV of input, R2 voltage changes 71mV and we all know the Ohm's law. R2 may need to be about 1MΩ and R1 400kΩ. The third term is my guess of what to expect from the transistor, and it seems to limit the transconductance you can have to about 10mA/V, if I'm right.
Gain equals
gm(Q1)·(R1 || R2) (ignoring collector resistance of Q1 and the output stage), so taking gm=10mA/V we need R1||R2=70V/10mA=7kΩ, so let's take R2=7kΩ. Transconductance is
gm(Q1) = Ic(Q1)/Vt, where Vt is the thermal voltage which depends on junction temperature, take 25~30mV for room temp to 70°C, so Ic must be ~0.3mA.
This puts 2.1V across R1, so supply voltage has to be in the vicinity of 5V. That being said, 2.1V is barely enough for the demanded voltage swing and will cause plenty of distortion, because R1 voltage will change a lot. This is the first big problem.
The second big problem is that such an amplifier just doesn't have enough current gain. The output stage will present
β·Rload additional load on the collector in parallel with R1 and R2. This is ~1kΩ in this case and it will completely kill the gain.
However, I plugged the numbers for a bare common emitter stage into SPICE and with only minor modifications it checks out:
- base voltage roughly equals input voltage
- collector voltage is 37dB higher, but gain will never be perfect due to thermal drift
- input current is a hair higher than -80dB, indicating almost 10kΩ impedance, at least up to ~20kHz

But distortion in transient simulation is just terrible, as expected. The full design could perhaps be made workable, by replacing biasing diodes with emitter followers to make a diamond buffer for higher current gain and bootstrapping R1 for less distortion.