As there are bound to be audio enthusiasts/engineers around maybe someone would like to share info/opinions/insight on the following.
Recently i landed a deal to design a battery/power management system for a designer portable audio box. However, to make matters worse the audio guy walked from the project and now i am supposed to take over all of the electronics. I have designed and built a fair number of audio amps over the years and also i do power electronics as part of my work so my mindset is ok, let's do this.
There is nothing fancy per se; it is a stereo speaker amp box (1 woofer + 1 tweeter per channel) with mobile phone as the default signal source. Basic controls only (i.e. the 3 classical knobs for vol, bass, treble). Target amp output is 2x100W into 4 ohm load. Fair enough although there are extra challenges due to the constraints of the design. All circuit boards need to be custom designed due to the oddly shaped spaces available. Also the customer specifically excludes any ready made subassemblies or boards. It must all be designed and implemented "in house".
The customer, while not technically knowledgeable does have some ideas about the implementation. One suggestion they made was to investigate the TK2050 as the power amp. They have an idea to drive the woofer and tweeter using separate power amps, the tweeter amp could be based on TI's TPA3110. These are suggestions or ideas only, not hard requirements.
I don't have a strong opinion and both seem fine with me, only i cannot find TK2050 chips anywhere. I think Tripath was merged (into Cirrus?) years ago and i have no idea what chips/from where they use in those chinese "TK2050" amps from say Aliexpress and the like.
So that would be my question #1: Are TK2050 chips still available and from where? Neither Mouser or Digikey seem to know anything about them.
Question #2 could be about the separate amps for speaker elements. To me it makes sense in that you can do all the filtering/signal conditioning at the low level signal stage instead of the output power level. Any insight or points to note about this would be good info.
Question #3 then follows from the above: should TK2050 not be available then what would be a worthy replacement in the 2x100W power range? I have looked into TI's TPA3221 but have no practical experience with those. The design as far as circuit and layout are concerned seems straightforward and that i know i can manage. The data sheet will not of course indicate any quirks of pratical caveats and those would be very interesting, as well as the overall impression of sound quality. Although there the various design tradeoffs in implementations may make direct evaluation difficult.
Question #4: If not the above chips, then what? The design is wide open at this moment. The only thing existing is a rough 3D CAD model of the housing with speaker arrangement, and a blank sheet of paper for the electronics.
Question #5: any suggestions regarding volume/bass/treble control? It is of course doable the old fashioned way with analog filters and pots. However, i would't mind a handy chip to do it all in one or something like that. I will of course investigate but any ideas straight away are welcome.
The power management alone will be a bitch, i know that much already. Managing 10 or 20 18650 LiPo batteries in 1p or 2p, 10s without the whole thing catching fire one day, and simultaneously charging while running the amps will take some time to puzzle out. So i would not mind a direct, straightforward solution to the amp question...