John Linsley Hood

English electronics engineer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroEnglish electronics engineer
PlacesUnited Kingdom Great Britain England
isEngineer Audio engineer
Work fieldEngineering Music
Gender
Male
Death11 March 2004
The details

Biography

John Laurence Linsley-Hood (1925 in Wandsworth, London – 11 March 2004 in Taunton, Somerset) was an English electronics engineer and designer of audio components.
He was educated at Reading School, Acton Polytechnic, the Royal Technical College (Glasgow) and after world war two, at Reading University. In 1942 Linsley-Hood joined the G.E.C. Research Laboratries at Wembley, working on Magnetron development as junior member of a team. Joining the R.A.F. aircrew in 1943, he was transferred to labour on Radar, then subsequently worked with T.R.E. (Malvern) overseas. After returning to university Linsley-Hood joined the Windscale Research Laboratories of the Atomic Energy Authority. He was in charge of the electronics team in the Research Laboratories of British Cellophane Ltd. from 1954.
John Linsley-Hood is best remembered by hi-fi enthusiasts for his "Simple Class A Amplifier", which he developed to provide a good-quality performance comparable to that of the classic Williamson amplifier. The design was published in Wireless World in 1969 (April 1969 issue, p. 148), and later updated in 1996.
Linsley-Hood wrote for a number of magazines and published books on schematics for audio components, including:
The Art of Linear Electronics (Oxford, Butterworth-Heinemann, 1993)
Audio Electronics (Oxford, Newnes, 1995)
Valve and Transistor Audio Amplifiers (Oxford, Newnes, 1997)

^ Patents granted for Linsley-Hood
^ Simple Class A Amplifier - Article

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