J
Jake
Guest
Hello all,
I have a question about where I should start in an overhaul of my
newly purchased HP 3114A function generator. It is the original model
with the hard plastic buttons, circa 1986 I believe.
A little background on me, I am an electrical engineering student,
first time post here. I have worked as an electrical engineering
technician for several years, so I am very comfortable with soldering
and useage of lab equipment, and I have a very nice scope and logic
analyzer and LCR meter and such, so I just need some basic advice on
how to improve the waveform quality on this thing.
I notice in the service manual that there are a lot of things I can do
calibration wise, but the only problem I am really having with the
unit is the waveform quality.
The higher the frequency, the worse the distortion, at ~5mhz I really
start to notice overshoot in the square wave and a little bit of
distortion in the triangle wave, and at ~20mhz, the sine and triangle
look the same (mediocre sine wave, triangle is a little dirtier) and
the square wave is completely unstable, basically really bad overshoot
and oscillation, not anywhere near flat, and it does not rise/fall as
fast as it should (has a slight slope to it)... The frequency is
pretty accurate, though I notice a little jitter on my scope.
My first thought is to just go through it and replace all the
electrolytics. I am under the general impression that the inductors
and ceramic caps should be OK.
Basically, I just want to give it a "tune-up" before I go through the
procedures in the service manual only to find that I can't get it into
spec because of old components, since the unit is almost 25 years old.
Any advice that can be given on what to watch for on these units would
be appreciated. I would like to get this thing working right so I can
start experimenting
I have a question about where I should start in an overhaul of my
newly purchased HP 3114A function generator. It is the original model
with the hard plastic buttons, circa 1986 I believe.
A little background on me, I am an electrical engineering student,
first time post here. I have worked as an electrical engineering
technician for several years, so I am very comfortable with soldering
and useage of lab equipment, and I have a very nice scope and logic
analyzer and LCR meter and such, so I just need some basic advice on
how to improve the waveform quality on this thing.
I notice in the service manual that there are a lot of things I can do
calibration wise, but the only problem I am really having with the
unit is the waveform quality.
The higher the frequency, the worse the distortion, at ~5mhz I really
start to notice overshoot in the square wave and a little bit of
distortion in the triangle wave, and at ~20mhz, the sine and triangle
look the same (mediocre sine wave, triangle is a little dirtier) and
the square wave is completely unstable, basically really bad overshoot
and oscillation, not anywhere near flat, and it does not rise/fall as
fast as it should (has a slight slope to it)... The frequency is
pretty accurate, though I notice a little jitter on my scope.
My first thought is to just go through it and replace all the
electrolytics. I am under the general impression that the inductors
and ceramic caps should be OK.
Basically, I just want to give it a "tune-up" before I go through the
procedures in the service manual only to find that I can't get it into
spec because of old components, since the unit is almost 25 years old.
Any advice that can be given on what to watch for on these units would
be appreciated. I would like to get this thing working right so I can
start experimenting