The latest 8 transistor oscillator is pretty nice, though yesterday my bench was inundated with some sort of noise that made it rather unstable out at 16.666ms delayed sweep, like 100ns or so of phase noise. I swapped in the 6 transistor version and it was acting the same, so it doesn't seem to be the new buffer at fault, and it calmed down later last night. This morning there is ~20ns of phase noise @16.666ms with 60Hz bursts superimposed on the drive wave. If I kill the power the bursts are still there, so the coil is ringing to external mains interference. But there seems to be a second interference component at work, and I've seen this sort of thing periodically through the years (crazy days and calm nights).
LC oscillators generally return one end of the coil to a low impedance, which might make one think would preclude this sort of behavior, but perhaps they are all susceptible to being pinged like this (i.e. an inadvertent ring down Q measurement). I suppose sticking an antenna on a high Q coil and expecting calm seas is just sort of asking for it in the first place.
[EDIT] Here's a scope capture of the pinging / ringing:
This is just one example, it can and does happen at random locations anywhere on the drive waveform. Zooming up, I see 4 cycles in 150ns, which is about 27MHz. There are fairly long leads on my coils, perhaps this stray inductance is doing the ringing with the capacitance of the coil (above SRF L => C)?.
I need to get this off the breadboard and onto proper vectorboard.