Thanks for your reply. If I may, I'll try and respond as best as I can.
1. Admittedly, this was something I took from another design. Following an older design that used the LM25956, that cap on the feedback divider is a feedforward capacitor to help assist in the feedback loop by increasing the phase margin for better loop stability. I thought it would benefit this design as well.
2. I tried out what you suggested. By removing my 15-ohm resistor, PMOS U4, and C37 (1 uF) and connecting a lead to the POS_REG_IN, I was able to bypass my inrush current limiting circuit and power the ICs directly straight from my bench power supply. Interestingly enough, it works. I was able to power on the bench supply and have the correct positive and negative output voltages, even when there was a heavy load connected (20-ohm on each side). I suppose this is the most telling.
3. Yes, I can observe certain points on the board with an oscilloscope. I haven't done that yet given the results of the test above.
EDIT: What a curious side effect. So, as of this post, it's been determined that the circuit works while there's a load attached by doing the following:
- Bypass the inrush current limiting circuit and reverse voltage protection (remove R15, C37, and PMOS U4)
- Bypass the negative slow starter by removing the capacitor(s) linked to it (from the picture, removing C8)
- Powering the ICs directly by connecting a wire to the POS_REG_IN node and powering it on from there
I noticed another curious side effect while the negative circuit was under load. There was some strange noise coming from either the negative voltage IC or its associated inductor (or at least something on that side of the board). I heard something akin to high-frequency whining that dies after a little time. That sounds like an indication of something, but I don't know what that would be. For what it is worth, my inductor is one of those
shielded fixed power inductors (10 uH, 10-amp rating). I only heard this recently. It's odd as to why this didn't happen in my first board but only in my second one, despite me making sure that all components were within their rated values.
EDIT 2: Ok...this feels a bit odd...so, after the aforementioned test, I wanted to see what would happen if I put the PMOS and R15 back (but not C37 or the negative slow starter). Would it still behave as the last test, or would it crash and burn? After putting them back, I powered it on, and the voltage still dropped under load, staying at a constant -3 volts. Sure, I should have predicted that. But, I wanted to make sure. Just on a whim, I tried something with my bench supply. The supply I'm using is a dual output supply, capable of having 3 amps on each output. So far, I've been trying it with one output at 3 amps max. However, on this whim, I put the outputs in parallel mode, essentially combining the outputs together so there's one output voltage, but the current capability is doubled to 6 amps. Now, with the PMOS and resistor still soldered onto the board, I powered on my bench supply in this mode allowing for current to be drawn. There is a 20-ohm load attached to the negative output. Interestingly enough, the negative output voltage didn't stay at -3 volts as how it behaved before, but I used a multimeter and observed it climbing to -5 volts and more. On top of that, there was some high-frequency whining. The whining noise grew as the voltage went to -10 volts, then it kind of stayed stable before dying. And there's no slow starter circuit. It sounds like the whining is a sign that perhaps something on the negative side is struggling.
EDIT 3: ....So, for the second edit, I think I found the cause of the high pitch whining. I accidentally put 26 volts instead of 13 volts to the board. Fried my negative voltage IC. I replaced it and it's back to the last known state: still not outputting the correct voltage under a 20-ohm load. So, using an oscilloscope, I measured the output voltage and the feedback voltage. They more or less follow the same pattern. It starts at 0, rises up to ~250 mV for a few milliseconds, but then it drops to the corresponding set voltage. Without a load, the output voltage was -10 volts while the feedback voltage was around -8.74 volts. That's roughly 1.25 volts in between the the output and the feedback (which I suppose makes sense since the output is taken at the IC's ground pin). This same behavior also occurs with a load, though the voltages are wrong.
So, I had a look at the input voltage. When the bench supply is powered on, the voltage rises from 0. But, when it reaches ~8.7 volts, the voltage drops suddenly to ~1.50 volts. After that, it rises again to the established voltage of 13.7 volts, or whatever voltage the bench is set for. It's rather noisy. I think the drop might be the result of the negative voltage regulator working, as the negative output is tied to the opposite end of its respective input caps.