I'm trying to make sense of the oscillator in Thomas Henry's VCO-1. Why is the output taken from the emitters, and not the collector of the second transistor (like in the picture below). Is there even a square wave to be gotten from the emitter? I more or less get that the oscillator is an Integrator/Schmitt trigger, with the OTA used as a variable resistor. If anyone would care to explain what is going on with the Schmitt trigger, I'd be double plus appreciative. There is a little explanation on the site down below, but I'm still lost.
Only the guy who did the design can say why, exactly, but I can make some guesses.
I've used this kind of Schmitt before. It's a bit of a pain to get right, but can do some interesting things, as well as being faster than an opamp version. As to why the emitter - I think it's because the emitter has a well defined voltage in all situations, and it probably fits the voltage he wanted for the input of the OTA. OTAs generally have a 25-100mV input range. The power supply is +/-15V, so the emitter goes above and below ground, I think.
When Q1 is fed a base voltage/current sufficient to turn it on, it saturates to some low voltage, perhaps only 50-500mV. That means that the 30V differntial through the 20K/10K sets the emitters to -5V, about. Q2 is turned off because its base is pulled to that same -5V, plus the Vce of Q1, but is also pulled down by the voltage divider of the 18K and 100K to -15, so it's off. When the voltage on the input 27K drops enough that Q1 can no longer keep a low enough voltage on its collector to keep Q2 off, Q2 starts conducting, and that pulls the emitters UP to a voltage determined by the 5.1K and 10K to -15. With Q1 off, Q2 keeps itself on with the current through the 20K and 18K in series. It stays that way until the input voltage rises enough to turn Q1 back on.
I'd have to do some more analysis to see what the hysteresis, symmetry, etc. is - this isn't what I was using it for, so my memory of the side effects is foggy.
I was also thinking it might be possible to use an OTA as the integrator (like in the LM13700 data sheet Tri/Square oscillator application), instead of using an OTA and an op amp integrator. Any thoughts on this, anyone?
It's possible. Thomas Henry has been tinkering with synthesizers for a long time, and I suspect that there's a lot that's NOT said about why various pieces were chosen. The OTA current source is a good idea for very wide range, and the JFET input integrator is a good, linear current-to-voltage converter/integrator. Presumably T.H. wanted this mix to get linearity, symmetry, etc.
I'd have to do some modelling and tinkering to make better guesses.