I'm still old skool when it comes to small diy projects like this and I tend to repurpose my collection of 'salvage' (where the components are still fit for their new purpose
).
I've not yet gotten round to tooling up for diy multi-layer PCB layouts that I can submit to a PCB house upon which to solder a collection of brand new smd parts. Maybe one day soonish, I might make that leap but for now, my version of 'dead bug' on a copper clad board serves me reasonably well. However, I've taken note of your recommendation of Johanson Technology as an RF smd inductor supplier for when I take that leap into the present day.
That MK II was built onto such a copper clad board - seeing as how there were only
4 1/2 3 1/2 DiP IC's worth (plus OCXO) in that project, I just drilled 0.6mm holes to mount the ICs conventionally, chamfering all but the ground pin holes so I could connect using jumper wires on the underside to complete the circuit connections.
If there had been just a few more ICs to mount, I'd have used the dead bug style of construction instead (and never mind its 'ugliness' - I see the beauty of "function over style" as an engineering statement anyway in these DIY builds).
I noticed that your 4th order Butterworth LPF is only one small capacitor away from being a full blown 5th order filter which is a little surprising seeing as how this 'extra' takes up so little space. When I was considering my options, the even order filters struck me as being the less elegant asymmetric option (the expression "Being one sandwich short of a picnic." coming to mind in this case),
Since the caps in my case are the smallest component parts when relying on thru-hole inductors, it just seemed a little remiss of me to save on the relatively minuscule space that one such extra capacitor would occupy so I "spared no expense" and went for the 5th order filter.
One feature of low pass filtering a 10MHz square wave is the fact that the third (most troublesome) harmonic from the gate outputs is just one third of the fundamental's amplitude to begin with which is theoretically just over 9.5dB down (and likely a little in excess of 10dB down due to the limitations of the 74HC series of ICs at 30MHz). In this case, you can expect to see the third harmonic content down to 60dB below the fundamental at the output representing a THD of around 0.1% given that the higher harmonic contributions should disappear into the noise, assuming the filter is doing a reasonable job up to 100MHz and beyond. It's no wonder the sine wave looks 'perfect' on a scope trace!