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(1) I tried to generate a 25MHz Square wave.... it doesn't look at all square! Is that because I would need a much higher spec to generate such a signal?
(2) I tried to generate a 1uS pulse with 5V hi, 0V low at a period of 1Hz. It won't let me do this... it says the minimum pulse width is 1mS! That's 1000x larger than what I wanted!
How do you measure it? At frequencies like this, impedance matching is a big deal.
That's the limitation of the generator. You've got the cheapest thing on the market, it will have limitations like this.
Into my pimped up (100MHz modded) Rigol 1052E scope with High-Z, Generator says "High-Z"
Well, that's crap. I'll just have to program a microcontroller then.
Well, at 100 MHz bandwith, you are getting only 3-5 harmonics, so it is not going to look square no matter what you do.
Something is not right with your setup, it will not go down to 1 uS, but it should be able to do 16 uS according to spec.
Interesting. 16uS would be fine.
Thanks for following up.Yeap. Indeed the 1mS minimum pulse width is when the frequency is 1Hz. I need a slow cycle so I can't dial it up to kHz.I find it odd to have this limitation. I'm just asking for a 10uS on time and 999990 uS off time. Don't understand why that is so hard?
Don't understand why that is so hard?
Nitpick: please stop confusing SI units of time (seconds, s) and conductance (Siemens, S). While it is clear here, in some situations it is ambiguous - any you might as well learn good habits sooner rather than later.Yes, I know samples are sometimes written as "S", but that is not a SI unit!
They use DDS with a fixed memory depth. And in order to create longer period, you need to "play back" that buffer at a lower sample rate. To create a pulse you need at least two samples, so if you decrease sample rate, you increase pulse width.
Quote from: tggzzz on February 26, 2016, 10:39:03 amNitpick: please stop confusing SI units of time (seconds, s) and conductance (Siemens, S). While it is clear here, in some situations it is ambiguous - any you might as well learn good habits sooner rather than later.Yes, I know samples are sometimes written as "S", but that is not a SI unit!It always drives me nuts that old analog scopes tend to display something like "1 uS" on the screen. Yes, I know, siemens got introduced in 1971 and electronics people were always a bit flamboyant with unit symbols, but still (there were even digitizing HP scopes built in the eighties that didn't acknowledge that SI yuppie stuff)...I wonder what's newest available test gear from big vendor still using "kilomegacycles"