Does it really matter in this case, if this circuit is prone to temperature changes and/or supply voltage as long as you get 90V+?
All you want is to trigger the avalanche.
Yeah it doesn't matter too much for sure but certainly no good for a production design IMHO. The thing you do tend to find is that sometimes after it has warmed up a bit, the MOSFET's conduction changes for the worse so the fixed duty cycle can chop off a chunk of the saturation cycle of the inductor. Also because I'm using a shitty MOSFET, if you don't run enough Vcc into it the thing runs in the linear region and just gets warm. Plus the 555 tends not to be as good at sinking current as sourcing it. Also the control divider's switching transistor's action is rather soggy. All situations lead to low output voltage and the avalanche to fail randomly unless you run it
hard and that sometimes leads to a "face full of MOSFET"
The LM311 one I built was pretty sneaky. It used a simple LM311 oscillator with charge steering diodes but the high to low switching point was controlled by comparing the MOSFET drain voltage against Vcc. So literally when the inductor hit near saturation (Vd = ~0.9*Vd), it'd switch state and dump that into the cap. The voltage control was done by changing the off cycle using another LM311 and a voltage reference controlling a BJT current source into the timing cap. I'm sure the 555 could be bodged to do the same with some thought unconventionally as it is basically two comparators in an IC.
I have here for comparison my Jim Williams Pulse Gen and the one from Leo Bodnar:
Jim Williams:
Leo Bodnar:
Thanks for this. Great results. I have a Leo Bodnar GPSDO already and the engineering is excellent. I may have to make another purchase soon
Edit: I WILL NOT BE DEFEATED. How not to build a boost converter: on a breadboard with a 555 and a random MOSFET I found in the junk box an IRF620 ... but it works . Feedback loop is via shorting the control pin to ground crudely with a 2n3904 and a voltage divider. Had to futz with it for a while to get the conduction cycle right for the pikey inductor. Doesn't need heat sink now due to thing bouncing an amp during conduction
Don't need no stinkin' switcher IC, nor 555, nor MOSFET to generate somewhat higher voltage
Yes aware of that. I've got a few HT transformers here which are probably easier now I think about it
... but not as much fun.