John Curl's Blowtorch preamplifier part II

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Waly. If you look it says measured on an Audio Precision to that value even though simulation showed much lower. Bonsai is no slouch and has real world experience with real products and real measurements. Just saying.

For a low power class A buffer, I could not care less of measurements, it is a no brainer to get them in the noise floor dust by designing with pencil and paper using common sense as the main tool.

Different story for a claimed <10ppm high power amplifier, that's where simulation results are usually a big pile of cow chips, the physical implementation usually controls an order of magnitude higher distortions.

And nobody needs an AP2 to measure 10ppm of distortions, a good sound card will also do for occasional measurement. Of course, one would need to know what he's doing, also understand the limitations of his setup. It's not that convenient and easy as with a Plug&Play specialized equipment.
 
A bit more about the scope. I moved to Shanghai January 2015. When the Chinese authorities looked at my shipment manifest, the Philips scope was listed in there along with my Rigol. They were refused entry into China and the reason given was " . . . There are no grounds for owning equipment such as this for personal use"

So, they had to remain in storage in Taiwan from were they were shipped without proper packing - just stuck in a cardboard box and airfreighted across the world. The Rigol survived.

I bought a cheap B&K in China (from Mouser mind you) and the insurance company gave me about 4 grand for the Philips back in the UK so I got a small Tek (4 channel 200 MHz 'dual mode' anslog/digital).
 
Wow, Waly, you won't make many friends by criticizing their decisions, when you don't know all the facts. If I got it right, Bonsai got the normal airfreight insurance and he put down the list or replacement price for a device that he originally got for free! That was smart of him. What he bought after was his choice. What is the problem?
As far as solderless breadboards are concerned, I have used them for more than the last 47 years, and I like them. I even feel that the 'parasitic' nature of the breadboard's capacitance, resistance and leakage gives a reasonable worst case situation to make sure that the circuit is inherently insensitive to small things. I once designed an ultra low distortion driver amp for Sound Technology using a solderless breadboard, much to the surprise of ST. The circuit worked for them when it went into production, and SPICE was out of my league at the time. Sometimes, the old methods work as well as the newer methods of design proofing.
 
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I even feel that the 'parasitic' nature of the breadboard's capacitance, resistance and leakage gives a reasonable worst case situation to make sure that the circuit is inherently insensitive to small things.
I agree. I've built 300 MHz digital on solderless breadboards and (eventually) gotten it to work. Porting to a proper PCB was easy and the result performed beautifully on the first try, since the signal environment was so much cleaner.
 
Wow, Waly, you won't make many friends by criticizing their decisions, when you don't know all the facts. If I got it right, Bonsai got the normal airfreight insurance and he put down the list or replacement price for a device that he originally got for free! That was smart of him. What he bought after was his choice. What is the problem?

No problem, just wondering who are the idiots that accepted evaluating (for insurance purposes) an old 200MHz analog scope at $4,000. Being in the same situation, I would beg for that scope to be destroyed in the transport, not being annoyed when it happens.

BTW, I don't plan to make friends on Internet forums, I have a life and real friends we gulp beers and snacks together. In fact, Mr. Bonsai, yourself, Mr. Groner, Mr. Didden, or anybody else around could well be the descendants of Tutankhamun, I couldn't care less when it comes to technical accuracy.
 
I agree. I've built 300 MHz digital on solderless breadboards and (eventually) gotten it to work. Porting to a proper PCB was easy and the result performed beautifully on the first try, since the signal environment was so much cleaner.

Digital is not analog, digital doesn't have stability issues. In fact, I agree myself that digital on a solderless breadboard can (but not always) be kind of a worst case.

Try a digital hazard on a breadboard, it may behave completely different from a PCB (in both worse or better ways). But then we no longer design digital stuff today on the breadboard, we write VHDL code and the computer generates optimal schematics with all the parasitic elements already included. Some of my colleagues are designing 10GHz digital boards (with controlled impedance traces), they usually work to the spec from the first iteration.
 
I was just laughing at the idea of complaining about the shortcomings of various breadboarding approaches, when I was reminded of some of the pictures of Bob Pease with his huge breadboards, using appreciable lengths of hookup wire, a bristling forest.

He did explain somewhere that the lengths of these things represented in some cases actual IC interconnect effects, at least resistively.
 
I remember the LH0063 in a TO-3. The datasheet listed the little brother device LH0033 in a G12B metal can, and the LH0063 in a TO-3, as

Fast, and Damn Fast Buffers.

Sadly the datasheets that survived into the internet era, were scrubbed of this little piece of amusement.

edit- google searching for snoa725a takes you to app note 227 which discusses these (sans "Damn Fast")

https://www.apexanalog.com/products/mp118.html
 
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