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On 15/02/2025 6:41 am, JM wrote:The usual market for these oscillators is audophiles - they use them to test complete speaker systems. A slow settling DC offset can jam the voice coils of the woofers and sub-woofers at one end of their travel for quite a while. This isn't an attractive feature.On Mon, 10 Feb 2025 17:18:01 +1100, Bill Sloman <bill.sloman@ieee.org>It starts up faster.
wrote:
>Basically same idea, but two separate controllable asymmetric current>
mirrors, rather than one, and no current steering. The half-wave
rectifier still seems to be the source of the distortion in the
stabilised output.
>
C25 and C26 take out as much of it as I can. Increasing them - from 15nF
to 33nF makes the distortion worse. Splitting the resistors into three
rather than two and adding two more capacitors might help, but what this
circuit needs is more insight, rather than more components.
What is the point of a push-pull current mirror?
You don't need response at dc.But you do have to wait a while for blocking capacitors to charge up.
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