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G8MNY  > TECH     23.04.16 09:32l 243 Lines 12186 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
BID : 2173_GB7CIP
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Subj: Scope & DMM Calibrator
Path: IZ3LSV<IW8PGT<CX2SA<N0KFQ<GB7CIP
Sent: 160423/0733Z @:GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EURO #:2173 [Caterham Surrey GBR] $:2173_GB
From: G8MNY@GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EURO
To  : TECH@WW

By G8MNY                                      (Updated Nov 13)
(8 Bit ASCII graphics use code page 437 or 850, Terminal Font)

This device lets you test the basic accuracy, calibrate Y1 gains, & frequency
response of a scope's input attenuator, & allow accurate adjustment of the
compensation trimmers, & also test Meter calibration.

The design gives accurate DC or 1kHz square wave voltages from 10V p-p down to
1mV p-p in 10, 5, 2, 1 steps.

The rise time (not fall time!) is better than 100nS @ 10V, but the attenuator
Rs & stray capacitance can double this on the 5 & 2V ranges.

It can also be used for checking other DVMs or other high input Z meters.

SCHEME
        ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿
        ³ 2 Stage  ³³  Level  ³³1kHz Astableô Mode  ³³ 11 Volt ³  12-14V
Output<Ä´ 4 Decade ôCalibrateô Cal Freq   ôControlôReferenceÃÄ< DC 
        ³Attenuator³ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ³ Cal Square ³ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ
        ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ           ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ

CIRCUIT
Based on a simple PNP astable, reference voltage source, & output attenuator..

OUTPUT LEVEL SWITCH
  WAFER 2  WAFER 1
O/PÄÄ>oÄÄÄÄÄ>oÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿
  10V ³   |   5k        ³
   5V o   |  oÄÅÄÄÄf    ³                       OFF
      ³  S|   3k        ³ 10V                      o
   2V o   |  oÄÅÄÄÄe   1k CAL              DC  MODE
      ³  C|   1k      Preset          ÚÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÄo SWITCH
   1V o   |  oÄÅÄÄÄd    ³            _³_  _³_       <ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿   eÄÄÄ +12Ä18V
      ³  R|   500ê      ³         D2 \_/  \_/ D1  Úo          \ /      @ 5mA
500mV o   |  oÄÅÄÄÄc    ³             ³    ³      ³ SQUARE   ÄÄÂÄÄ
      ³  E|   300ê      ³  BC214      ³    ³      ³ WAVE       ³ TR1
200mV o   |  oÄÅÄÄÄb    ³  ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ(ÄÄÄÄÁÄÂÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÂÄÄÄ¿     ³ PNP
      ³  E|   100ê      ³  e\³TR3     ³    ³/e       ³   ³     ³
100mV o   |  oÄÁÄÄÂÄa   ³ PNPÃÄÄ¿     ÃÄÄÄÄ´PNP      ³   ³     ³
    100k N|       ³     ³  ./³  ³     ³ TR2³\        ³   ³    1Mê
 50mV o   |  oÄf  ³     ÃÄÄÙ    ³     ³      ³       ³   ³     ³
      ³   |      100ê  _³_      ³     ³      ³       ³   ³     ³
 20mV o  P|  oÄe  ³    \_/      ÃÄÄÄÄÄ)ÄÄ´ÃÄÄ´   100u³+  ³     ³
      ³   |       ³  D3 ³  4n7  ³     ³  4n7 ³      ===  ³     ³
 10mV o  L|  oÄd  ³     ÃÄÄ´ÃÄÄÄ)ÄÄÄÄÄ´      ³       ³   ³     ³
      ³   |       ³     ³       ³     ³      ³       ³   ³     ³
  5mV o  A|  oÄc  ³     ³     120k   120k    ³       ³   ³     ³
      ³   |       ³     ³       ³     ³      ³       ³  _³_+   ³
  2mV o  T|  oÄb  ³     ³   Set ÀÄ47kÄÙ      ³       ³  /_\'   ³
      ³   |       ³    10k  Square/³\       4k7      ³   ³ Z1  ³
  1mV o  E|  oÄa  ³     ³   pre Pot³         ³       ³   ³ 11V ³
     ÚÁ¿  |       ³     ³          ³/\ Freq  ³       ³   ³     ³
    1k Ct |       ³     ³        ,20k Preset ³       ³   ³     ³      Äve
GNDÄÄÁÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
  ATTENUATOR                ASTABLE                  REF     CURRENT LIMIT

POWER
TR1 (BC214) provides a limited current source (Approx 5mA) controlled by the
1Mê base resistor, to put current into an 11V Zener Z1 & the rest of the
circuit. Although this current source varies a little with the supply &
temperature it is much better than just a resistor, & hence the zener reference
voltage (5+6V zener) gives say 10.8V ñ10mV, is kept fairly accurate!

If the +10V range is not wanted the circuit can be worked with a 5.6V zener, a
PP3 battery & suitable attenuator changes! For higher voltages different
circuits are needed with diodes to protect the bases from overvoltage.

DC MODE
When the DC mode is selected D1 (1N4148) powers the circuit, while D2 inhibits
TR2 from conducting & hence T3 must conduct in the normal way providing an
identical +ve output voltage to that when the circuit oscillates. D1 voltage
drop should be of no consequence due to the constant current from TR1.

ASTABLE MODE
The TR2 & TR3 (BC214) make up the normal if up side down astable circuit. Diode
D3 isolates the charging up of T2 base capacitor from the T3 output, so keeping
the edge turn on very fast.

The frequency is determined by both sets of C & R (4n7 & 120k) time constants
so the Cs should be polyester type for best thermal stability. Any in-balance
of the square wave (not 1:1 ratio on a scope) can be adjusted by trimming the
set square pot. Using a common 20kê preset to trim the joint bias will allow
the frequency to be trimmed to exactly 1kHz with a frequency counter.

10V CALIBRATION
This is done using a accurate DVM ( >1M Input Z). Set the mode switch to DC &
set the output to switch to 10V, adjust the 1k Cal pot for 10.000V. Check that
this DC is the same value as the 1kHz square wave rises to, on an oscilloscope.

ATTENUATOR
The attenuator resistance values are made up so that 10mV/1k ohm gives easy
numbers to work with. But the 5k=10k//10k, 3k=3.3k//33k or 2x 1.5k etc. need 2
Rs to make the exact value from the E12 resistor series. All the Rs are
soldered around the switch. I used a screened 2 bank 13 step switch, other
switches will do with the Rs made up the values to suit.

The 6 positions out of the 1st 7 positions on the 1st wafer bank are paralleled
up to the last 6 positions, which sees the 2nd wafer bank switch in a 100:1
attenuator, which uses high enough values not to significantly load the 1st
attenuator values. Open wire low capacity wiring is needed for all the wiring
in this area, e.g. NO "neatly tied up wiring forms", just short looped wires!

For accurate work (1% or better) the R values can be trimmed with much higher
value Rs to ground or 10V using an accurate DVM as for the initial 10V
calibration.

If the 5V output impedance is too high (2.5k=5k/5k) for some loads, put a 5k6
from the 5V point to ground & change the 10k//10k for 2k7//68k, the 68k value
needs to be selected on test to give 5V once the 10V CAL is setup again.

For a good square wave on the low signals end of the attenuator, a screening
plate is required between the dual bank switch, & possibly a trimming "Ct" to
ground (1-20pF) across the 1k to over come crosstalk from the 10V to 1mV
circuits.

CALIBRATING A SCOPE INPUT ATTENUATOR.
This assumes you are OK with working inside live scopes with HIGH VOLTAGES!

Connect the calibrator with a very short coax cable. With the scope at maximum
Y1 gain setting, but without any added gain multiplier (as these reduce the
bandwidth), select a suitable calibrator square wave signal level to give a
2Ä5cm display, using timebase controls to show 0.2cm/mS to give a large steady
trace.

STEP 1. Check front panel Y1 Gain is set to "Cal" position. Adjust internal Y1
preset gain (not high gain X10) for correctly calibration height avoid display
parallax error. Adjust preamp C/Rs tweaks for best (ideal) square rising edge
response. Check the X10 (or whatever) gain option is also accurate adjust that
high gain preset, if there are separate C/Rs for X10 also adjust.

N.B. some scopes have HF C/Rs that will not be adjustable with a 1kHz square
wave but need faster 1MHz or RF frequency sweeps to set up.

     TO LITTLE HF             CORRECT               TO MUCH HF
     ____         _       ______        __      ³`\.___
  ,/'    ³     ,/'       |      |      |        |      |      |    | = faint
  |      |     |         |      |      |        |      |      |    | Verticals
  |      |     |         |      |      |        |      |      |
  |      `\.___³         |      |______|        |      |   ___|
                                                       ³./'

STEP 2. Switch Y input attenuator to next position & up the calibrator level to
suit, check defection calibration (do not adjust scope calibration unless you
have suitable replacement scope attenuator Rs!), adjust the correct Y
attenuator's series C (Ctrim) for best (ideal) square rising edge response.
There may be two Cs, a series one (Ctrim) & a parallel one (Cstray), this one
seems to do nothing at this stage!

Repeat this for the first set (order) of input attenuators.

                   Typical x10 x100 x1000    Typical x2 x3 or x5
SCOPE                    Attenuator              Attenuator
INPUT  o)ÄÂÄ´ÃÄÄÂÄÄÄ>oÄÂÄÄÄÄÄ´ÃÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄo<ÄÄÄ>oÄÂÄÄÄÄÄ´ÃÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄo<ÄÄÄ AMP INPUT
 BNC      ³ AC  ³  SW  ³    Ctrim   ³  SW   SW ³    Ctrim   ³  SW     Input Z
Input Z   ÀÄo \ÄÙ      ÃÄÄRseriesÄÄÄ´          ÀÄÄRseriesÄÄÄ´         1Mê //
1Mê //      DC         ³            ³                       ³          30pF
 30pF                 ===Cstray   Rshunt                  Rshunt
                       ³            ³                       ³
        ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
        Both Attenuators banks are straight through wires for x1.

STEP3. Higher order attenuators (x10, x100, x1000) must "see the same load
capacitance" of the first order attenuators so they can only be adjusted once
the sensitive ranges have been done.

STEP4. Equalising the scope input capacitance (Cstray) across these ranges is
best done with a x10 scope probe. Set the Y attenuator gain attenuator to its
max sensitivity, with the X10 scope probe, view a suitable sized square wave.
Adjust the probe's own trimmer for the best waveform. Now step up the scope Y
attenuator over the ranges with suitable input levels, if the square wave shape
changes, adjust the unused (did nothing before) parallel Y caps (Cstray) for
the same shape. Remove the scope probe.

Now repeat step 3 & 4 until there is no tweaking needed. Go & adjust Y2!

STEP 5 TIMEBASE CALIBRATION
Make sure the Timebase velocity control is in its "Cal" position. Find the LF
timing preset & adjust (sometimes it is the X gain) so that the 1kHz waveform
fits a 1mS/Division range (³~³_³ cycle in each square). Check on some of the
other ranges for a mean calibration. For HF timebase calibration you will need
an RF signal generator.

STEP 6 XY MODE/X IN
If it has these modes, then they can be calibrated for the correct gain to,
in the same way as STEP 1, but U just see 2 dots unless U can put a locked
timebase into Y.

AC RMS SCALED & TRUE RMS METERS
Using a square wave to calibrate RMS meters is not as complex as it may seem.
On AC, most meters are MEAN reading, but calibrated in RMS for sine wave use.
The sine wave mean is 0.636 of the peak, compared to the RMS value of 0.707 of
the peak, so the readings are scaled higher. The error is exactly 1.11 which is
called the "form factor".

  100%_³     _      __PEAK         100%_³ __________  __RMS = 5V
 70.7%_³   /' `\     __RMS         +5V  ³³          ³
 63.6%-³  ³     ³    --MEAN             ³³          ³   1:1
       ³ ³       ³                      ³³          ³  SQUARE
       ³³         ³                     ³³          ³
   0% -³³- - - - -³- - - - -³       0% -³³ - - - - -³ - - - - -³
       ³          ³         ³           ³           ³          ³
       ³           ³       ³            ³           ³          ³
       ³            ³     ³             ³   AC      ³          ³
       ³             \._./          -5V_³ COUPLED   ³__________³

So back to the square wave of 10V p-p (DC component removed with a series cap
if needed) this is a 5V peak square wave, which actually has the same RMS value
as 5V DC, & will read 5V on a true RMS meter. But a MEAN reading meter which is
scaled x1.11 higher & will read 5.55V AC.

DC MEAN METERS
The same goes for a square wave, 10V peak 50% of the time (what the square wave
should be!) should read 5V, but 7V RMS. So you can determine if a meter is MEAN
reading DC or not.

 100%_³ __________            __PEAK = 10V
      ³³          ³
      ³³          ³   1:1     --RMS = 7.07V
      ³³          ³  SQUARE
      ³³          ³
 50% -³³ - - - - -³ - - - - -³ --MEAN 5V
      ³   50% ON  ³ 50% OFF  ³
      ³           ³          ³
      ³   DC      ³          ³
  0% _³ COUPLED   ³__________³  __0V

DC METER CHECKS
With the Calibrator on DC mode, any reasonably high impedance meter can be
tested for basic accuracy & damaged or burnt out meter calibration Rs detected.


Also see my Tech buls on "Oscilloscopes", "Scope Probes" & "Kelvin Varley
Voltage Divider".


Why Don't U send an interesting Bul?

73 De G8MNY @ GB7CIP


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