Firstly, this is not a re-run of the 2014 post in this forum about measuring 240v A/C on a scope!! I understand about the scopes limitations, and the applied voltages peak-to-peak values, where 100x would be better than 10x etc. etc. I'm asking about the PROBES themselves!
I use/have only switchable probes, (1x & 10x), and if one is measuring say up to 50v using a 10x probe then that's all sweet! But just as Dave knocks cheap <$20 Multimeters, (rightly so!), when measuring say 240v to 500v as there is little protection, and the Meter may end up like "a Dingo's guts" etc., I can't help thinking about the PROBES internals as well, as this is rarely mentioned?
If you have say 200v to 500v, (and not a low-power signal!), would/could cheaper probes break down internally, destroying not only the Probe itself, but then what it may pass on to the actual Scope too!! I've never looked inside such Probes to see what they do??
AS A BIG SIDE NOTE !! hahaha...
A "Mr Carlson's Lab" video from 2018, was discussing a very old 1930 'National' Oscilloscope. I couldn't believe the absolutely minimalist circuitry, and lack of components!! Vertical scaling/voltage? no problem!! Hard wired input straight to the vertical deflection plate? Horizontal Oscillator not even a sawtooth, but deflectors almost directly connected to a low voltage A/C tap on the main transformer! Wow!! Check out the Schematic below, starting at 26:44 in the video...
There are high voltages & high voltages!
At about 2:30 in the morning, we were trying to find out where the drive signal from the previous stage prior to the PA had disappeared to on a MF AM Broadcast transmitter.
I reasoned that, if I wound the RF drive right back, I should be able to see the drive at the grid connection to the PA, using a 'scope & a x10 probe.
Setting it up, I turned the Tx on,
"Kerblam!"& the transmitter shut down!
Opened the cabinet, & everything past the finger guard on the probe had vaporised.
Oops!----- maybe winding the RF drive "right back"didn't quite do what I thought!
Doh!
In fairness, though, we both had finished a normal full days work, driven 300+ km, & it
was 2:30am ("Stupid O'clock", as another workmate called it).
With great trepidation, I approached the input circuitry of the 'scope (a Tek 453 from memory) only to find no damage------ The probe had "given its all " & protected the 'scope!
Re the sidenote:-
I remember many years back, the old Perth Tech College had an "open day"where they had a lot of weird stuff up & running, one of which was a "homebrew" version of just such an Oscilloscope, built in a perspex box, so you could see the guts.
(Now that was a real "Tech School", with lots of real stuff--not like this "TAFE" nonsense!)
My 1976 ARRL Handbook has a schematic & a description of the same sort of device. although it wasn't presented as a "project".
Apparently, the idea is that the mid portion of a sine wave is "quasi-linear", so it can be used for horizontal deflection.