bdunham7 already suggested me to check in between 30v and 300mv ranges, and it scales( 00.0005V-0.0010V noise on 30v range, and 000.005V-000.01V for the 300mV range). So if I am correct this points to the ADC section that has the problem?
No, I think that test points away from the ADC being the problem, at least when combined with the results from your other ranges. Just to be clear, you've corrected the CAL ENABLE issue and you are observing those number as noise, not a steady offset? Can you compare the 3VDC and 300VDC ranges? I know those noise levels were low, but it still might be handy to see them.
The comparison between the 30 V and 300 mV range does not tell if the problem is more before the ADC or more at the ADC. bdunham7 was wrong on that, though the general idea is good: The main difference between the 300 mV and 30 range is only the input that. So it kind of checks parth of the input hybrid and they seem to be similar.
Me wrong?
Actually I didn't say that, I was suggesting using the comparison of two scaled ranges to see where the difference was relative to U101. Comparing them all might help too, but I wanted to start somewhere and
Aphelion indicated that the noise was very small on the highest range, while the lowest range/greatest gain at 30mVDC doesn't have an equivalent with the 100X divider switched in.
So now we know that it has ~10 counts of noise in the 33.3X (medium) gain setting regardless of the input divider setting, and the noise apparently scales up in the higher gain setting and down in the lower gain setting--the former is on video and the latter I've just asked
Aphelion to check again. Since all of the ranges use the gain of the input to keep the FS of the ADC to be in a -10VDC to 10VDC range, there is no additional scaling or digital magnification which would cause the ADC to read differently from one range to the next--the displayed counts are the (ADC output * calibration correction * a constant) with the decimal point set separately. So to me, the ADC doesn't seem to be the issue. That and the apparent absence of noise on the AC input range.
So it looks like the noise is present on the inputs of, or internally to, U101. Since the input paths are mostly separate up to that point, and since the inputs to U101 are effectively shunted with ~100K in either case, it appears to me that the issue will be U101 or the closely associated parts of U102.