So for an informal test, the attenuators and terminations and 10mV/div and 20 mV/div ranges are not really needed.
Hi Dave,
Terminators definitely not needed indeed, since I don't have any, but the amplifier range most definitely needs to be at teh requested 10mV/div. I took the picture at 20mV/div so the waveforms fits on the screen, but running the tests like this results invariably in 100 missing codes or so. See screen capture below. Looking at the pattern the test returns (with flat lines at the start and finish), I guess these correspond to the top and bottom of the screen where no signal is present at 20mV/div. Switching to 10mV makes sure that the signal covers the entire height of the screen, and some more, so that the test doesn't risk missing codes because a signal that might not span completely the viewing area.
It is not the knob but the cam switch which is causing the problem. When the time bases are locked together, the horizontal control should be stiffer than the vertical controls
Yes you are right, if I pull the knob to unlock the second time base, the knob feels perfectly fine, same as the vertical amplifiers.
OK so the stiffness in single time base mode is mechanically normal/explainable, I will stop worrying then, it's not going to fall apart any time soon...
but not spongy
Ah thanks, so I do indeed have problem there... see the video clip I just made a minute ago to make myself clear (hopefully) :
https://youtu.be/Pi-mr1mysAoThere appears to be some play in the knob, like 2 or 3 of the splines that are molded into the button. When you grab it and go rotate it, the shaft does not move immediately, it does not feel connected to the button... even though I have tightened the two screws really well.
So when you turn the knob it doesn't inspire a lot of confidence, it feels like every time you go to turn it, it might suddenly spin round !
So maybe the button is actually well secured to the shaft, and it's the shaft itself which some play inside the switch mechanism. In other word the mechanical assembly is worn out and it's not repairable.... or with difficulty.
Oh and the scope did it again : when I turned it on it was already in store mode and... the triangle was again not centered properly, again like yesterday, it started 2 small divisions below zero/ground level... and just as yesterday, after a couple minutes it progressively climbed to end up spot on in the middle, where I set it to with the trimmer before putting the cover back on.
So it must indeed be a warm up "issue", in quotes... A practical real world example that yes, when test gear manufacturers tell you all the time to let the instrument warm-up before attempting any measurements.... it's not all bullshit, they designed the thing so they know a thing or two ;-)
Anyway, was nice to witness a practical example of this, something you can actually easily see.
So, to sum it up, I would say this repair is done for now, but that there are still some things I might do later on, to polish it up even further :
- Take a deep breath and get to the time base switch assembly to see where the play comes from exactly, and if there is any way/hope of fixing it, so that it feels "just right" and become even more of a pleasure to use.
- Replace that bloody power supply connector on the digital board, if one day I come across that type of connector
- Hissing from the regulator coil : didn't do the measurements Dave asked for to see if the hissing was inherent to the coil, or if it could be a symptom of something not working quite right... so might come back to the SMPS later on to do that
- Have a spare coil now (and still the project of winding my own !) so could try it to see if it makes any difference.
- Then I could replace each and every electrolytic cap in this SMPS, not just the big ones on the secondaries, but all the the smaller ones in the regulator and inverter section. One of them might be bad and contribute to the hissing by some mechanism yet to be determined. The smaller value ones I could replace with tantalum capacitors maybe, for better performance and reliability, to even further reduce that hissing noise maybe.
- I could record that hissing noise and run an FFT on it with the TDS 544A, once I have fixed it, and fixed the firmware issue which causes it NOT to have FFT enabled even though Tek's catalogs of the day clearly say that the 544A had FFT as standard. Could be cool to see the spectrum of that hissing noise, might give a clue as to what is happening in the regulator, and we could maybe correlate it to some ripple voltages probed here and there. I don't know... could be fun and educational.
Of course the "soft" FFT on scopes suck big time compared to a proper 'spectrum analyzer, but since we are in the audible range here/low frequency range, and we don't expect or require ultra high performance in any way shape or form.... well maybe the soft FFT of the scope will be good enough to actually see something useful. If not, I might repeat the experiment later on, once I have enough money to buy a real/proper spectrum analyzer. I have gathered by now that the "big" ones, that go up to 1 or 2 or 22 GHz, suck at low frequency, and that for very low frequencies they made dedicated "audio" spectrum analyzers. I guess they are bound to be cheaper.. so maybe I could hunt for one of those to start with, then get a "big one" later, to cover the higher frequencies, when I have saved some more money.
So in short... there is ALWAYS something you can do, always something to fiddle with and learn from, I like that, brain never ceases to be stimulated !