A few days back I was repairing my Goldstar OS-7040A:
The vertical amplification sometimes dies on this unit. It turns out that the culprit was a bad solder joint on a connector. This conn was on the vertical amp board and is where the signal enters from the front input board.
I'm boggled by the length of the cable that is used to connect these two things. It's the fat blue cable in this photo:
This cable is about 2 to 3 feet long. It only needs to be about 10cm long. It's so long that it's wrapped once around the mains transformer and then once around the whole back of the unit before coming back.
Pulling it apart reveals that it's a shielded twin pair line:
... but it's unshielded for about the same distance as it would take a shorter cable to replace this entire big blue thing.
I had a go at replacing it with just three cheap F-F 2.54mm jumper cables (blue/green/yellow in photo below). You can see just how short of distance it is that needs to be spanned:
I decided to compare how the scope performs with the blue monster cable vs my cheap jumpers. I fed in a square wave at a few MHz and took photos of both cases, then distorted these pictures in the GIMP to make them line up. Blue is with jumpers, red is with long original cable:
A few things to note:
- My shorter cable gives slightly sharper corners
- My shorter cable gives me a slightly higher amplitude signal display (not visible, visually destroyed when I aligned the two pictures)
- Both attempts had very different phases (not visible, visually destroyed when I aligned the two pictures)
The last point has me thinking: was this wire intentionally long to introduce signal delay? Otherwise it might have just been dodgy triggering that caused the phase issue.
Any thoughts?