The diversity of op-amps out there is a reflection of the difficulty of designing a chip to deliver particular sorts of features or specs under ANY set of circumstances. It's night impossible, so what you find is that chip X will deliver such-and-such a spec under THESE conditions, and chip Y manages to deliver the same spec under another set of conditions. And THAT'S why we keep seeing newer op-amp designs that aim for a particular niche, where a particular set of specs are delivered under a particular set of conditions.
The 5534/32 is a great chip for doing certain things, but its best characteristics (like low noise and high current-delivery capability) are exhibited under certain conditions. Look at page 10, here, and you'll see what I mean: http://hammer.ampage.org/files/Device1-8.PDF This information is old but still relevant.
The 5534/32 is a great chip for doing certain things, but its best characteristics (like low noise and high current-delivery capability) are exhibited under certain conditions. Look at page 10, here, and you'll see what I mean: http://hammer.ampage.org/files/Device1-8.PDF This information is old but still relevant.
Comment