I have a breadboard with a single op-amp amplifying a sinewave. The breadboard gets fed +/-21V and I use an LM7818 and LM7918 to being this down to +/-18V. Next to the breadboard is a power-amp. As soon as I connect the output of the op-amp to the power amp, the LM7918 blows. I have so far blown half a dozen.
I am puzzled as to what has caused this. I even placed 10R resistors before the LM7918 but it still blew. They blew instantly, no heat, no smoke, nothing. Just ceased working, half of them then letting the input voltage through (very naughty that), and the others regulating to -3V (rather than -18V).
The LM7818 has not suffered the same fate.
So, what can you do to burn an LM7918? It can accept up to -35V. My highest rail was -21V. I know that you can burn it by applying at the output a voltage higher than the input. Maybe that is what happened through the op-amp . Some high frequency component from the power-amp (under construction and heavy harmonics at 4MHz) made it back through the op-amp's output, into the op-amp's negative supply pin, and into the negative rail.
Truth to be told, I had not placed capacitors anywhere around the LM7918 or around the op-amp. Because I had thought they should be more robust than that.
The only way for these oscillations to have killed them must have been through the op-amp, yet the op-amp (LM6172) survives and we have half a dozen dead LM7918s.
I am still puzzled as to what happened. Currently it is working with a 100nF cap at the output and a 100uF at the input. The power-amp does not oscillate anymore. Any of these may have cured it.