EF-VAS 'glitch' problem

Hey guys.
I've been having trouble 'getting right' the VAS-EF stage setting. I've been having problems with a 'glitch', oscillation on the negative side of the waveform that I'm not able to fix.
Can anyone give me a light on what might be going on?

It is a small oscillation that only appears when mowing the wave and only on the negative side.
WhatsApp Image 2021-12-17 at 07.35.36.jpeg
SCHS.png
 
Can anyone give me a light on what might be going on?
The VAS transistor is being heavily over-driven and saturating during the clipping period - with no current limiting other than the 10 ohm emitter resistor it will be pulling perhaps 100mA or more. When clipping ends the VAS transistor takes a while to recover from the saturation, taking several microseconds typically, by which time the feedback network is completely out of lock and the spikey transient you see is the feedback loop recovering
control.

If you can limit the VAS current to about twice its nominal working current this will greatly reduce this effect while still allowing full current swing at the VAS output. This also protects the VAS from over-dissipation should the positive-side output device(s)/drivers(s) fail shorted to the +ve rail, which is a handy extra bonus.

The typical limiting circuit uses the voltage across the VAS emitter resistor to sense the current and provide a Vbe drop to turn on a limited transistor that pulls the VAS input towards the rail.
 
The VAS transistor is being heavily over-driven and saturating during the clipping period - with no current limiting other than the 10 ohm emitter resistor it will be pulling perhaps 100mA or more. When clipping ends the VAS transistor takes a while to recover from the saturation, taking several microseconds typically, by which time the feedback network is completely out of lock and the spikey transient you see is the feedback loop recovering
control.

If you can limit the VAS current to about twice its nominal working current this will greatly reduce this effect while still allowing full current swing at the VAS output. This also protects the VAS from over-dissipation should the positive-side output device(s)/drivers(s) fail shorted to the +ve rail, which is a handy extra bonus.

The typical limiting circuit uses the voltage across the VAS emitter resistor to sense the current and provide a Vbe drop to turn on a limited transistor that pulls the VAS input towards the rail.

Thank you Mark. There is really an overload in the VAS as I could see in practice. I'll arrange circuit fixes. Thanks for the feedback 🙂
 
Please see this presentation - specifically slide 5 - for some helpful hints

rail sticking and glitch
Hey Bonsai

I tested the solution provided in the file you shared and I was successful. Thank you again. Your name can be found in the amplifier's technical manual. Thanks.
 

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