While recapping a focusrite RED 1 mic preamplifier I noticed the first amplifying stage has a rather large 220pF compensation capacitor between pins 5&8 on the 5534 opamp. All other stages use a more common 22pF value.
In all schematics I can find (this design appears in many of the focusrite preamps) the value of this exact cap should either be 22pF or is not given so out of curiosity I changed it to 22pF. It works and sounds great up until the very last setting on the gain switch, 60dB, where it starts to distort (oscillate?) badly.
The only other variations in schematics I have found are the capacitor to ground in the shunt portion of feedback/gain switch which is either 100uf or 470uf and a very slight variation in the loading resistor of this stage, between 4k7 and 6k1.
Any Idea as to why this revision of the circuit needs more compensation? Poor layout? It has 10nF to ground on both rails right near the opamp.
In all schematics I can find (this design appears in many of the focusrite preamps) the value of this exact cap should either be 22pF or is not given so out of curiosity I changed it to 22pF. It works and sounds great up until the very last setting on the gain switch, 60dB, where it starts to distort (oscillate?) badly.
The only other variations in schematics I have found are the capacitor to ground in the shunt portion of feedback/gain switch which is either 100uf or 470uf and a very slight variation in the loading resistor of this stage, between 4k7 and 6k1.
Any Idea as to why this revision of the circuit needs more compensation? Poor layout? It has 10nF to ground on both rails right near the opamp.
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