I am having trouble getting any sensible waveforms when trying to check an old Tektronix scope power supply lines. I suspect the electrolytics in the power supply are iffy, and am using my good scope to see if there's a lot of ripple in the line voltages, which are various, from 5 volts to 110 volts. I only have cheap Ebay x1 / x10 switchable probes, the scopes that are working properly are a 100 meg Philips / Fluke Combiscope, that is switchable analogue to digital mode, and a 150 meg good quality Dataman 520 USB scope. I am setting the scopes to AC, and using the ground tag on the PCB board of the scope under test and probing the various voltage test tags. I get no discernible ripple like waveform, but I do get what looks like random noise. I am setting to read in millivolts and using various timebase settings. I don't think either scope has a setting to reduce bandwidth, which I have read is desirable for these sorts of measurements. I think the probe leads may be picking up general noise, possibly off the ground lead? Is this an art form, or am I doing something wrong? Is there another, easier way to check these supplies for ripple? Thanks.