The cognoscenti will be able to figure out my Dastardly Plan.
You're trying to copycat the HP3458 ADC (and take over total world domination by selling your CE3459)?
Something like that - not quite copycat but perhaps 'reimagine'. There's a
lot more to producing something like the 3458A than
just the ADC but I thought it would be fun to build a multi-slope ADC and play around with seeing how far you can go on cheap-arsing the parts and still get decent results. The core of the ADC is a couple of op amps, a comparator, a cheap small FPGA and some very cheap analogue switches - a £10-15 BOM if you're aiming at full 3458A capabilites, more like £7-8 if you're aiming at 34401 level performance. Op amps have come a long way since HP designed the 3458A and you can
buy an op amp that's up to snuff for the integrator whereas they had to design a custom amp. Other things have changed too, they needed
precise and
stable slope setting resistors because they didn't have the compute power available to deal with calibrating them, with modern microcontrollers you can cope with uneven slope values and merely need
stable resistors.
First pass in solder is either going to go to the very bottom end and use very ordinary precision SMD resistors to set the slope currents or possibly a statistical array
á la Pickering built out of Vishay NOMCA resistor arrays.