





Out of curiosity, how low is too low? I may have a 1pF and 2pF MLCC cap from one of my old microphone experiments I could try tomorrow.Was just about to suggest a smaller value cap.
Sim looks good.
That peak isn't noise, it's an oscillation. Looking back at your circuit diagrams I still don't see any series resistance between the Op-amp output pin and the output jack socket. The op-amp is having to drive the capacitance of the cable, and that will change its phase shift and make it oscillate.Ok, here's comparing the buffer without the 10pF. Seems like it's a lot closer to the original 10-foot cable sound from an EQ standpoint.
Neck:
Bridge:
And for completeness, here's the buffer with no guitar plugged into the input and no 10pF:
View attachment 348933
Here's with the 10pF cap across the input pin 5 to pin 4 (GND):
The noise floor is probably about normal for this particular setup.
Thank you. Finally I understand what is going on. So the simple solution might actually be a series resistor on the output as you suggested long ago.This is how you drive a capacitive load (such as a cable)
https://www.analog.com/en/resources...-to-avoid-instability-capacitive-loading.html
Yes. I probably just called it the wrong thing to simplify the term. My bad.That peak isn't noise, it's an oscillation.
Thanks for the link to the article. Lots of good stuff in there!Looking back at your circuit diagrams I still don't see any series resistance between the Op-amp output pin and the output jack socket. The op-amp is having to drive the capacitance of the cable, and that will change its phase shift and make it oscillate.

I thought that the filter solution was dubious, definitely a case of "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong." As soon as someone connects a longer lead, the oscillation will come back at a lower frequency.Thank you. Finally I understand what is going on. So the simple solution might actually be a series resistor on the output as you suggested long ago.
Edited to add: Is the the same reason we add a small series resistor to MOSFET gate drivers?
How about on the output jack sockets?Yes. I probably just called it the wrong thing to simplify the term. My bad.
Thanks for the link to the article. Lots of good stuff in there!
Yesterday we did try putting a resistor at location B with no change in the oscillation.
Speaking of which, what would be the proper location(s) to put a series resistor? A or B?
Also, the B side of the TL072 is another unity gain buffer that sends the signal to the MCP6002 op amp (two gain stages) where the signal gets amplified to send to the microcontroller for frequency evaluation. Would we need a series resistor at all in location C or D?
View attachment 348951
It depends on whether the relays can connect the output of the op-amp to the jack socketIt was relatively easy for me to put a 47R at positions A and C for testing. Would that work as well? Is a series resistor even needed for the B side of the TL072 since it's just feeding the gain op amp (MCP6002)? In the actual next PCB we could put the series resistor in position B.
With those series resistors and the 10pF cap I'm getting a close EQ to a 10-ft cable.
So when you plug in a cable, the op-amp has to drive a capacative load.In buffered bypass mode the opamp is connected via the relays to the output socket, yea. Maybe I’m not understanding something.
Correct. So that means we definitely need the series resistor in there, right? Does 47R seem like a good value for that?So when you plug in a cable, the op-amp has to drive a capacative load.
Yes, 47Ω and 100Ω are common values to use.Correct. So that means we definitely need the series resistor in there, right? Does 47R seem like a good value for that?
Yes. R4 and R25. They used to be called "build-out resistors" as the go between the circuit and the outside world, and they take the bullet instead of the ICs when the customer does something daft. They also keep things stable. Don't forget that a unity gain circuit (because it has lots of feedback) is closer to instability than one with lots of gain, although it seems counter-intuitive.@Ian0 is this what the 560R (R4) is for in the Klon circuit (series resistor)?
https://www.electrosmash.com/images/tech/klon-centaur/Klon-Centaur-Schematic-Parts.png
Studying this now!Many moons ago when this thread was young (or maybe it was a previous thread) you mention some fantastic "super buffer" circuit that you found on YouTube.
I would suggest replacing it by the circuit in fig 3 of the AD application note, using a butch op-amp such as the AD8510 with 50mA drive capability. Then you have a proper buffer designed by proper people!