Thanks for all the replies!
I wonder if those long leads are causing the problem.
I don't know but I don't thinks so. I originally built this on a breadboard and a got a *very* similar signal that at the time I thought was because of the breadboard and jumper wires. Just to prove I was right and it was the breadboard I then built it on the strip-board you see. But I was wrong. It wasn't the breadboard. This is why I have a gut feeling it's not wire length or the circuit build but something I am either a) misunderstanding or b) that I am using the wrong component for the job.
Well, it might be worth a try if the output of a 3.3V powered Renesas XLH535025 oscillator ... 100pF capacitor in parallel to the resistor.
Oo! I tried this! Kind of. And it worked perfectly. I used an XLHxxx080 to drive VHC circuitry and it was fine. Just for the sake of it I then tried upping the clocks voltage to 4.1V and left it running for four days. It didn't seem too have suffered but the current draw on the clock was more than doubled.
Howdy! Assuming the schematic is correct, why do you have Vrefb going through a 20k resistor to +5V? Won't that limit the amount of current that the LSF0102 can drive on its output?
For what it's worth, I notice TI has a series of videos dealing specifically with these products.
Now this was interesting. I was using a 20K because I found some random circuit on the interwebs that suggested a 20K resistor and a 0.1uF capacitor for the enable Bias circuit.
Watching the the videos Dr Jefyll suggested they really stress that getting the bias circuit right is important (probably why it is now built into the '0204). I swapped the 20K out for the suggest 200K and got this:
Still not great in terms of rise time but notice that the yellow probe low level voltage has dropped from 1.4V to 0.7ishV. I want to use that yellow signal in other LVC devices and if you sort of squint 0.7V is okay.
I think the actual solution is to use a 74LVC4245 3.3V to 5V up translator and put all my signals through it to keep the timings similar. It's basically the '816 and a bunch of 5V tolerant LVC circuitry after the '4245 so in terms of timing and not mucking around with LSF devices this is my best choice. And the '4245 is the same price as the LSF0102 anyway