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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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#1
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How would you interpret this waveform?
Repairing a BK E-200D rf signal generator. This waveform is what my
scope is showing on the output with the internal 400hz audio signal applied at 50% modulation on an approx 500kHz signal. It should be a clean sine wave. I am new to using a scope so not sure what the waveform indicates, clipping? Power supply is not clean? Here is a jpeg - thanks for any help! http://mparkes.com/img_1807.jpg |
#2
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Mike wrote:
Repairing a BK E-200D rf signal generator. This waveform is what my scope is showing on the output with the internal 400hz audio signal applied at 50% modulation on an approx 500kHz signal. It should be a clean sine wave. I am new to using a scope so not sure what the waveform indicates, clipping? Power supply is not clean? Here is a jpeg - thanks for any help! http://mparkes.com/img_1807.jpg It looks like your modulating audio signal is a filtered square wave (or a square wave run through an amp with inadequate bandwidth). -- The e-mail address in our reply-to line is reversed in an attempt to minimize spam. Our true address is of the form . |
#3
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On Mon, 21 Mar 2005 21:06:32 -0800, Mike
wrote: Repairing a BK E-200D rf signal generator. This waveform is what my scope is showing on the output with the internal 400hz audio signal applied at 50% modulation on an approx 500kHz signal. It should be a clean sine wave. I am new to using a scope so not sure what the waveform indicates, clipping? Power supply is not clean? Here is a jpeg - thanks for any help! http://mparkes.com/img_1807.jpg The first thing I would check would be the power supply at the modulator and after. If that is solid I would then check the signal at the input and output of the modulation stage. This waveform appears to show that the modulating signal is overdriven somewhere, so start at the modulator input and follow the signal through until you see the problem. Good luck. John |
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