I've bread-boarded a MC34063A in an inverting configuration and used the component values calculated from http://www.nomad.ee/micros/mc34063a/ using 12V input, -12V output, 100mA output, 10mV, 80kHz frequency. Is it normal to see lots of noise on the output of the converter (see the attached image)? I'm seeing roughly 400mV noise at a frequency of 50kHz. I measured the TC pin (pin 3) and it look to be oscillating at roughly 80kHz. Not sure where the 50kHz is coming from.
It is common to see noise when protoyping a switching circuit. In many cases, the noise you are seeing is not real noise. It may be noise entering the scope via the earth lead, or back through mains earth. How are you earthing the scope probe ground? If you attach the scope probe tip to the circuit ground, do you see the same noise?
Or it might be real noise. The way you organize the ground plane is important. The parts you choose:- The diode turn on characteristics. The ability for your filter capacitance to handle high frequency transients - are you using an electrolytic or a multilayer ceramic capacitor on the output?
If you have just tested the circuit on a breadboard, then the layout will almost certainly cause noise.