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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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Posted to sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.equipment
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MassiveProng wrote:
On 28 Feb 2007 18:27:45 -0800, "Too_Many_Tools" Gave us: I have a well stocked test bench at home containing a range of analog, digital and RF test equipment as I am sure most of you also do. Well the question I have is how do you handle the calibration of your equipment? What do you use for calibration standards for resistance, voltage, current and frequency? Links to recommended circuits, pictures and sources would be appreciated. Since this is a need for anyone who has test equipment, I hope to see a good discussion on this subject. If you have used test gear, and you do not intend to PAY to have it calibrated, you be best off leaving it all the **** ALONE! You're amazing. You don't even know what equipment, qualifications or needs he has, yet you're right there with THE answer. Lets take an example. I have a 20 year old Hitachi scope as you know, the voltage cal is way off (~20%) in a couple of ranges. Are you suggesting that I should drag it across town, spend $200 and be without it for 2 weeks just to get it adjusted by some obstinate, E-1 grade line tech, instead of using a brand new DMM w .03% accuracy to tweak it myself? I'm quite sure that my Micronta is up to the task to be honest. If someone doesn't need traceable calibration, then why should they pay for it? Especially if they have the resources to do it themselves. I'm thinking of buying a cheap used Rb time base from e-bay so I can cal my old Protek freq counter and adjust the timebase on my Hitachi scope, it's certainly cheaper than having it done. Using a PIC driven by an ordinary can xtal, and a quartz wris****ch of known accuracy, I was able to tweak the xtal to within about 1-2ppm over the course of a week or two. Of course you know that's impossible, don't you? |
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