Manual
The Technical Stuff 
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1176LN Circuit Details 
The fundamental problem facing Bill Putnam Sr. when he began designing the 1176 limiter was how 
to keep its FET operating within its linear region in order to keep distortion sufficiently low. After 
much experimentation he eventually hit upon the simple and elegant idea of using the FET as a 
voltage-controlled variable resistor, forming the bottom half of a voltage divider circuit, across which 
the audio signal was applied. He then placed his voltage-controlled attenuator ahead of a solid-state 
preamplifier stage and line driver, and derived its control voltage from a relatively conventional    
level-sensing circuit monitoring the output. 
The output stage of the 1176 was a carefully crafted class A line level amplifier, designed to work 
with the then standard load of 600 ohms. The heart of this stage is the custom output transformer 
developed by Putnam; its design and performance is critical to the sound of the device. This 
transformer was distinguished by the fact that it used several additional sets of windings to provide 
feedback (a practice widely used in the tube amplifiers of the era), which made it an integral 
component in the operation of the output amplifier. Putnam spent a great deal of time perfecting the 
design of this tricky transformer and carefully qualified the few vendors capable of producing it. 
Figure 1 - Block Diagram of the 1176LN 
Figure 1 shows a block diagram of the 1176LN. Signal limiting and compression is performed by the 
gain reduction section. Before the signal is applied to the gain reduction section, the audio signal is 
attenuated by the input stage. The amount of attenuation is controlled by the Input control 
potentiometer. The amount of gain reduction as well as the compressor attack and release times are 
controlled by gain reduction control circuit. After gain reduction, a pre-amp is used to increase the 
signal level. The Output control potentiometer is then used to control the amount of drive that is 
applied to the output amplifier.   
Let’s take a closer look at each stage within the 1176LN circuit. 










