Here are some quickly made pictures of the triangle waves. The top waveform is at the output of the buffer amp and the bottom waveform is at the input of the buffer amp.I'm interested in how this is developing, and how the final result works out. This is some pretty serious engineering!
ESR, maybe. Thanks for the reminder. The cap I am using is silver mica -- from who knows when. It is only 36pf so the SBB contacts are a significant amount of the total timing capacitance. The combination, has, no doubt, really ugly characteristics at these frequencies.I wonder what that odd "jump" at the leading edges of the triangle wave (i.e., right after the ramp changes direction)? It almost looks like the waveform you get when you rapidly charge/discharge a capacitor having significant ESR, but it isn't clear to me how that could possibly be the case here.
I don't expect it to be high enough to be a problem at +/- 6ma. I should be able to see a glitch in the very peak of the triangle wave at lower frequencies. I will double check but I don't remember seeing any glitch like that.I wonder what kind of contact resistance you're getting on the SBB, also. Didn't think of that earlier.
Hmmm... no, I wouldn't either, not at that current level.I don't expect it to be high enough to be a problem at +/- 6ma.
Now, that's a possibility...Wait.... Maybe it is some of the square wave used to switch the polarity of the current that is coupling into the timing cap circuit.
Another great idea shot down by reality. I looked at the square wave the switches the 2I current source on and off. The glitch does _not_ happen at the switching time.Now, that's a possibility...
I just HATE it when reality does that...Another great idea shot down by reality.


Actually, this is the first time I have added the foil. I would consider adding the copper to the SBB on future versions. (I would also consider beefing up the power buses and maybe even specifying thicker copper).Out of curiosity. Have you ever considered fabbing some of those soldered breadboards of yours with the copper cladding intact so that you didn't have to use the foil? Do you find that the foil bus patterns are too different from project to project to allow that?
Probably doesn't help that it is hand wired on a pad per hole proto board -- Carefully hand wired but...The op amp would be my prime suspect for the oscillations, also. My experience with wideband op amps is that they are finicky little critters...
I have used them in the past but they won't work in this project. I played around with "improved" versions in LTspice. Again they were interesting but not useful for what I am doing. By the way, I think National came out with a monolythic version of the LH0002 but I don't think it performed quite as well. I don't know if it is still available.Sorry if I got it wrong. Are you actually using the LH002? Learnt that they were discontinued long time ago.