R raymondo Member Joined 2004 2009-06-10 11:03 pm #41 2009-06-10 11:03 pm #41 i second that. that looks as nice as any pro audio board ive worked on in manufacturing. excellent 🙂 jwb Member Joined 2002 2009-06-10 11:30 pm #42 2009-06-10 11:30 pm #42 Thanks for the kind comments. I'll be happier when the regulators don't oscillate! jwb Member Joined 2002 2009-06-15 6:22 am #43 2009-06-15 6:22 am #43 Oscillation killed off by removing one cap from the negative rail of the shunt regulator. I may need to add it back in later, with more or less capacitance or ESR, to restore transient performance, but stability comes first. Prev 1 2 3 First Prev 3 of 3 Go to page Go Status Not open for further replies. Share: Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn Reddit Pinterest Tumblr WhatsApp Email Link
jwb Member Joined 2002 2009-06-10 11:30 pm #42 2009-06-10 11:30 pm #42 Thanks for the kind comments. I'll be happier when the regulators don't oscillate! jwb Member Joined 2002 2009-06-15 6:22 am #43 2009-06-15 6:22 am #43 Oscillation killed off by removing one cap from the negative rail of the shunt regulator. I may need to add it back in later, with more or less capacitance or ESR, to restore transient performance, but stability comes first. Prev 1 2 3 First Prev 3 of 3 Go to page Go Status Not open for further replies.
jwb Member Joined 2002 2009-06-15 6:22 am #43 2009-06-15 6:22 am #43 Oscillation killed off by removing one cap from the negative rail of the shunt regulator. I may need to add it back in later, with more or less capacitance or ESR, to restore transient performance, but stability comes first.
Oscillation killed off by removing one cap from the negative rail of the shunt regulator. I may need to add it back in later, with more or less capacitance or ESR, to restore transient performance, but stability comes first.