Use of Measuring Instruments
Use of Measuring Instruments
The electron beam emitted by the heated cathode at the rear end of the tube is
accelerated and focused by one or more anodes, and strikes the front of the
tube, producing a bright spot on the phosphorescent screen.
The electron beam is bent, or deflected, by voltages applied to two sets of plates
fixed in the tube.
The horizontal deflection plates, or X-plates produce side to side movement.
They are linked to the time base. This produces a sawtooth waveform.
During the rising phase of the sawtooth, the spot is driven at a uniform rate from
left to right across the front of the screen.
During the falling phase, the electron beam returns rapidly from right to left, but
the spot is 'blanked out' so that nothing appears on the screen.
In this way, the time base generates the X-axis of the V/t graph.
The slope of the rising phase varies with the frequency of the sawtooth and can
be adjusted, using the TIME/DIV control, to change the scale of the X-axis.
Dividing the oscilloscope screen into squares allows the horizontal scale to be
expressed in seconds, milliseconds or microseconds per division (s/DIV, ms/DIV,
s/DIV).
The signal to be displayed is connected to the input. The AC/DC switch is usually
kept in the DC position (switch closed) so that there is a direct connection to the Yamplifier.
In the AC position (switch open) a capacitor is placed in the signal path. The
capacitor blocks DC signals but allows AC signals to pass.
The Y-amplifier is linked in turn to a pair of Y-plates so that it provides the Y-axis of
the V/t graph.
The overall gain of the Y-amplifier can be adjusted, using the VOLTS/DIV control, so
that the resulting display is neither too small or too large, but fits the screen and
can be seen clearly. The vertical scale is usually given in V/DIV or mV/DIV.
The trigger circuit is used to delay the time base waveform so that the same section
of the input signal is displayed on the screen each time the spot moves across. The
effect of this is to give a stable picture on the oscilloscope screen, making it easier
to measure and interpret the signal.
X-POS and Y-POS controls - to change the positions of the axes. Adjusting Y-POS
allows the zero level on the Y-axis to be changed, Adjusting X-POS allows the zero
level on the X-axis to be changed.
Oscilloscope Controls
1. On/Off switches help to control electrical transients which can be harmful to
sensitive circuit components.
2. Intensity - Adjust the brightness of the trace
3. Beam finder - The screen will display what quadrant the trace is in; then use
the horizontal (#10) and vertical controls (#15) to move the trace to the middle
of the screen.
4. Triggering source and mode enables the scope to start the sweep at the same
point on the waveform to produce a stable image on the screen. Use "internal"
or "auto trigger.
5. Trigger Slope - enables selection of voltage potion to trigger the scope on(up or
down)
6. Trigger Level -Triggering allows horizontally alignment of repetitions of the
signal waveform.
7. Sweep calibration. It adjusts the horizontal scale.
Triggering
8. Sweep. This determines the horizontal scale for the oscillograph. The scale is
read in the upper white window. Its units are seconds/division.
9. Horizontal position. This enables movement of the signal back and forth along
the X-axis.
10. Channel select. Most oscilloscopes are dual trace. This means that they can
display two signals at once hence have a set of two channel knobs
11. Signal ports. There is one signal port for each channel. It is a BNC connector for
this oscilloscope. BNC bayonet connector
12. Sensitivity calibration. This knob is used to change the vertical scale. It must be
turned all the way clockwise.
13. Sensitivity. This determines the vertical scale. It is read in the left hand white
window. The units are volts/division.
14. Vertical position. This knob controls the vertical position of the trace.
15. AC/DC select. When this is set to "AC" the DC part of the signal is filtered out by
a capacitor placed in series between the signal input and the scope. When the
selector is set to "ground", the beam will move to zero volts. When the selector
is set to "DC", the entire signal will be displayed on the scope.
Frequency measurement
The frequency (f) of the signal is defined as the rate at which a periodic
signal repeats. It is usually measured in units of Hertz (Hz), where 1 Hz =
1 cycle per second.
It can be seen that four(4) cycles occur within one second; therefore, the
signal has a frequency of 4 Hz.
The frequency, f, of a wave is inversely related to its period (T):f = 1/T
The period of the signal is 250 milliseconds, therefore the frequency of
that signal is:
f = 1/T
f = 1/250 milliseconds
f = 4 hertz
Amplitude measurement
Assuming the Volts/Div knob reads 2 V/div, the above peak-to-peak voltage
would be: Vpp = 2 volts/div * 5.2 div = 10.4 volts
Assuming the Sec/Div control knob read 50ms, the above period would be:
T = 50 milliseconds/div * 5.25 div = 2625.0 milliseconds = 2.625 seconds
Frequency =1/2.625sec =
Probe
precision
Poor precision, Good
(Good
poor accuracy
repeatability)
Poor accuracy
(high deviation
from position)
Poor precision
(repeatability)
Improved
accuracy
Good precision
(Good
repeatability)
Good accuracy
(No deviation
from position)
Resolution
Digits Displayed and Over-ranging shows the number of digits displayed the DMM.
It is often specified as a certain number of full digits (i.e. digits that can display
values from 0 to 9) and an additional over-range digit referred to as a 1/2 digit.
That 1/2 digit typically shows only the values 0 or 1.
For example, a 6 1/2 digit display has a 7-digit readout, but the most significant digit
can read 0 or 1 while the other 6 digits can take any value from 0 to 9.
Hence, the range of counts is 1,999,999. This should not be confused with
resolution; a DMM can have many more digits displayed than its effective
resolution.
Note: The 1/2 digit has been referred to by DMM manufacturers as any digit that is
not a full digit. A full digit can take any value from 0 to 9.
Number of Counts -- the number of divisions into which a given measurement range
is divided. For example, a traditional 5 1/2 digit voltmeter has 199,999 counts
(from +199,999 to -199,999) or 399,999 total counts.
Calculation of resolution
In order to determine the resolution of a system in terms of voltage, we
have to make a few calculations.
First, assume a measurement system capable of making measurements
across a 10V range (20V span) using a 16-bits A/D converter.
Next, determine the smallest possible increment we can detect at 16
bits.
That is, 216 = 65,536, or 1 part in 65,536, so 20V65536 = 305 microvolt
(uV) per A/D count.
Therefore, the smallest theoretical change we can detect is 305 uV.
%
%
%
%
70 = 3.5
70 = 3
Digital
A digital multimeters can hold a specification of 2.0 % reading + 4 digits.
This means that 0.04 have to be added to the reading uncertainty of 2 %.
An example based on the 3 digit digital readout:
This will read 5.00 V while the 20 V range is selected.
2 % of the reading would mean an uncertainty of 0.1 V.
Add to this the inaccuracy of the digits (= 0.04 V).
The total uncertainty is therefore 0.14 V. The real value should be between
4.86 and 5.14 volts.
Example
As the 10X probe attenuates the signal by a factor of ten, this obviously
means that the signal entering the scope itself is reduced.
This has to be taken into account. Some oscilloscopes automatically adjust
the scales according to the probe present, although not all are able to do
this. It is worth checking before making a reading.
The 10X scope probe uses a series resistor (9 M Ohms) to provide a 10 : 1
attenuation when it is used with the 1 M Ohm input impedance of the
scope itself.
A 1 M Ohm impedance is the standard impedance used for oscilloscope
inputs and therefore this enables scope probes to be interchanged
between oscilloscopes of different manufacturers.
10X oscilloscope probes also allow some compensation for frequency
variations present.
A capacitor network is embodied into the probe as shown.
The capacitor connected to ground can then be used to equalize the
frequency performance of the probe.
+VCC
L2
R1
C1
L1
C4
T1
R2
C2
R3
Vo
C3
0v
[2]
Typical circuit