I was probing around a wireless router last night and found a point that generated about a 1 inch solid strip on my scope. I kept adjusting the time until I could just barely see the wave form. Then I pulled my X5 magnification button and got two overlaying sine waves that were sort of flickering. I found about a range of 2mm or so on my trigger knob that could almost get me a clear waveform (here). Since I was having such a hard time isolating that trace, I was thinking that I might be at the limit or possibly exceeding the range of my scope (20MHz)
So my brain isn't doing a very good job right now and I'm trying to figure out the frequency.
I'm on .2 uS/Div and x5 magnification so that's .04uS/Div, right? From what I can tell, I'm just about getting 1 complete wave per division at this scale so what frequency does that look like to you?
Also found this on the output of what I thought was a voltage regulator.
What I was interested in is that it looks like a square wave but the top is 1.5 divisions and the bottom is 2 divisions. Is it more likely that the wave is being generated that way or that there's something going on with my scope? I'm at 2uS per division on this wave with no magnification. The 10K test signal on the scope is pretty much spot on. Also interesting is that this device has 12VDC going in and what I thought were pins with 5V and 8V. Turns out the 8V is really 9VAC but the cheap volt meter I was using didn't seem to care all that much.