On slow power supply ramp up, if both MOSFETs conduct at the same time, the tank circuit is effectively shorted out. This means it has practically no
inductance, if the windings are well-coupled. (Temporary) current limiting now depends on the series choke, which will probably saturate more quickly
than you can ramp the supply voltage. At that point you have a big, saturated, steaming pile of silicon and ferrite (unless you have a
current-limited power supply, under which conditions it merely simmers with mild annoyance).
To make this work, the series choke needs to be able to handle without saturating whatever current the power supply can deliver. Also, the gate drive
to both MOSFETs needs to be kept at zero when the device is not oscillating. This latter point is the opposite of how a typical Mazilli driver
works, as it supplies gate drive to both devices on power up, and relies on one device out-competing the other to get oscillation going. If
oscillation doesn't start, well, then both devices smoke.
Think about this: given that both MOSFETs should be "OFF" when not oscillating, but with the functioning circuit remaining within the design
constraints of a Mazilli-type design, could you modify the design to work with, say, a temporary pushbutton that could get the oscillator started?
And a circuit that, if it stopped oscillating under load, would allow the gate drive to drift to zero?
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