Speaking of speed being the problem... or at least the sudden change. I was curious what would happen if I wired a '74 D-type edge triggered flip flop into a 100Mhz clock.
The result was pretty bad.
Basically I have
100Mhz clock oscillator connected to an
unbuffered inverter and from there into a
D-type flip flop all on soldered strip-board.
So my question is: What have I done (or not done?) What is going on?
- Am I missing a vital component?
- The circuit is about 9cm by 6cm, does that make the connections too big?
- Is it because I'm (obviously) missing a ground plane?
- Are my oscilloscope probes junk? (They're the default Siglent 200Mhz jobbies)
- Is a 100Mhz signal on strip-board possible in anyway?
- Other things that I don't know that I don't know...
The 2200uF cap was me trying to work out how to get signal off my 3.3V line. It doesn't seem to have any significant effect on anything.
Seriously, what is going on in here? The yellow 100MHz clock signal is very small (about 1V peak-to-peak) but the data sheet for the LVCMOS oscillator indicates it should be 10% VDD (3.3V) to 90% VDD. This could well be my oscilloscope probes, they're rated at 200MHz but I've seen reviews saying they're rubbish.
The purple 3.3V line is wobbling by about half the height of the clock signal? And so is ground which makes it really hard to tell what the 'scope is truly using for reference.
The green 50Mhz signal is at least going above 2.4V and below 0.4V but I'd expected that it would have been "square'er" as it's driven by Schmitt triggered inverted, three of them. Although their datasheet says worst case propagation time is 4ns and as the clock rise / fall time is 5ns. It's wired as a clock divider with /Q into D.
The cyan 25MHz signal is the 50MHz signal wired into the unused side of the flip flop.
The top row is unused (5V).
the second row is 3.3V.
the third row is 0V.
This build was for curiosity's sake but should I build it on a PCB to see the difference? Is it worth it?
Ultimately what I was trying to do was get a nice square 50Mhz clock signal.