This happened to a friend last week.
He had designed an electronic circuit, mostly analogue, and was testing the prototype PCB when he found spurious analogue signals, something was un-expectedly oscillating. No matter what he tried the problem remained.
It was the soldering iron. A 24 volt temperature controlled iron. Unknown to him the transformer in the soldering iron's base station that regulated the heat in the iron was an SMPS. ( Switch Mode Power Supply ). Radiated electrical noise from the soldering iron and / ir it's base station was affecting the electronics.
He had designed an electronic circuit, mostly analogue, and was testing the prototype PCB when he found spurious analogue signals, something was un-expectedly oscillating. No matter what he tried the problem remained.
It was the soldering iron. A 24 volt temperature controlled iron. Unknown to him the transformer in the soldering iron's base station that regulated the heat in the iron was an SMPS. ( Switch Mode Power Supply ). Radiated electrical noise from the soldering iron and / ir it's base station was affecting the electronics.