Noone didn't mention, because this idea is wrong from a few perspectives of this PSU design:
1) You cant easily heatsink the package like that MULTIWATT thingy of LM3886. The only one M3 screw for such package is just hilarious and any other means of mounting is just stupid. Too complicated. You cannot beat two TO3 mammas on a chunk of aluminium.
2) Loop stability. In general, the audio power amps are mostly designed so they are stable only at certain level of gain. For example TDA2005 is the most know bastard, that just needs at least those 20dB to be really stable. I think the LM3886 won't be much different. And as long as I need only +-1V output range, 20+dB gain does not make much sense.
3) minimum supply voltage. I doubt the LM3886 will work at about +-3V supply. Why would I use +-9V minimum supply for a +-1V output range? But this can be easily done with two TO3 mammas... no problem.
Conclusion: integrated audio poweramps are really not suitable for this low voltage high current application. Difficulty of heatsinking, too high minimum gain for stability and too high minimum operating voltage are those culprits.
NOTE: LM3886 is stable above 20dB gain, I was right. ...just have looked into the datasheet.
Since last time, I have made some progress with breadboarding. The discrete power stage design is I think closed, schematic below. Sorry for not filling in the resistor values, these are still TBD. The breadbord version of the circuit is simplified and using little bit different scheme.
I have also breadboarded the difference amp section for remote sensing. The whole is connected as on the image below below.
Please don't be worried about those probably unknown to you semiconductor types used, these are some old beefy mammas made by our old national manufacturer, that has quit doing some decades ago.
Now only CK1 is used and it seems to be stable. CK2 and RK2 not used (bcs of lacking knowledge how to calculate them. Can somebody help please?).
However serious stability issues occur when capacitively loading the supply output. 100n or 3uF or whatever small cap on hand, wild oscillation starts. How to solve that issue, how should I tune the feedback loop so it will be stable with C loading on the output?
Thx, Yansi