while designing my own (low frequency, AD8065) front end I often came across the classical JFET/DC servo combination. It has been mentioned in this forum a number of times, e.g.
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I was wondering - why still bother with discrete solutions if there is a ADA4817 (1 GHz BW, 4 nV/rtHz)? Lower cost? Lower noise?
Noise should be lower with the discrete implementation, but the ADA4817 has surprisingly good noise. A MOSFET should be noisier than a JFET.
The ADA4817 uses series feedback with an input differential pair, so overload recovery is slower and the dynamic response has more aberrations than a FET follower, although low frequency distortion will be better because of feedback. To get a cleaner response, bandwidth must be limited to what looks like 400 MHz so the ADA4817 is slower, but getting good performance at 400 MHz or higher is tough no matter what technology is used. Full power bandwidth of the ADA4817 is much slower although this should not matter, but see below.
Note that JFET and MOSFET oscilloscope inputs are typically limited to 500 MHz because of fixture input capacitance, and the same fixture limitations will apply to the ADA4817. Raw performance of a JFET input is reflected in active probes which achieve 1+ GHz.
Interestingly, in a teardown (I think Dave) I saw that even my shiny new RTB2004 scope seems to employ the classical LMH6518+JFET buffer (?) frontend (and just one attenuator relay!).
If only one input attenuator is used, then the slew rate and full power bandwidth requirements are proportionally increased, by 10 times in a modern (1970s and later) design. With 2 attenuators the font end only has to handle a single range of 0.5 volts peak-to-peak (50 millivolts per division), but with one input attenuator it has to swing 5 volts which makes a huge difference with great demands on slew rate and full power bandwidth.
This is why oscilloscopes like the Rigol DS1000Z series have bandwidth which varies with signal level. They have insufficient slew rate and full power bandwidth to support the higher signal levels from using one input attenuator at their specified bandwidth.