Hi Dave,
at the end of #938 part 2 (@8:03min) you explicitly talk about high impedance loads/sources, but you only showed shorted probes. In my
previous post I already presented some high impedance results for my Rigol DS1054Z.
Just the mechanical presence of some mass on the BNC connector seam to have a significant damping effect alone.
For high impedance circuits capacitive coupling (of 50Hz fields) and EMF from moving charges has a much larger impact on real measurements.
For an other test I mounted 3 different probes side by side on the back of a chair as far away from the desk as possible.
channel 1 = open BNC (for comparison of microphonic effect)
channel 2 = 1x probe
channel 3 = 10x probe
channel 4 = 100x probe
Image 3 shows the effect of a bang on the top of the case compared to the pick up of 50Hz just by the tiny pins of the probes (nothing attached to the probe) The nearest mains cable was at least 1m away from the probes. You can see how the open BNC (yellow channel 1) is showing the noise of the bang, but only channel 3 (magenta) is slightly effected. In my previous tests I already found, that channel 3 is the weakest (most microphonic) one.
But compare this now to the EMF impact of an electrostatic charge on a PVC pipe waved 50cm away from all the three probes shown in Image-4. And remember: only the 5mm long tiny pins of the probes are acting here as "antennas" to pick this up.
Image-5 demonstrates how much larger the EMF and 50Hz signals become, when the standard spring hooks are attached to the probes.
BTW. with a 1m cable on a DMM I can pick up a "Harry Potter" like waving of the (electro-statically charged) magic PVC wand even from 3m distance.