Old 'scope adventures

J

John Marsh

Guest
Hi everyone,
I have an ancient Heathkit 10-12U oscilloscope,full of valves (tubes)
and great for airing laundry. It seems to be only AC coupled; i.e.
connecting a steady DC source produces a brief jump of the trace. If I
connect a source of pulsed DC which peaks at 9V, how do I interpret &
calibrate the trace? Pulse generator is a 555 timer as astable.
Viva valves,
John.
 
look on the input line, or some where around it.
you should have a switch that saids DC/AC input.


John Marsh wrote:

Hi everyone,
I have an ancient Heathkit 10-12U oscilloscope,full of valves (tubes)
and great for airing laundry. It seems to be only AC coupled; i.e.
connecting a steady DC source produces a brief jump of the trace. If I
connect a source of pulsed DC which peaks at 9V, how do I interpret &
calibrate the trace? Pulse generator is a 555 timer as astable.
Viva valves,
John.
 
Jamie <jamie_5_not_valid_after_5_Please@charter.net> wrote in message news:<10bhqk2afv9d072@corp.supernews.com>...
look on the input line, or some where around it.
you should have a switch that saids DC/AC input.


John Marsh wrote:

Hi everyone,
I have an ancient Heathkit 10-12U oscilloscope,full of valves (tubes)
and great for airing laundry. It seems to be only AC coupled; i.e.
connecting a steady DC source produces a brief jump of the trace. If I
connect a source of pulsed DC which peaks at 9V, how do I interpret &
calibrate the trace? Pulse generator is a 555 timer as astable.
Viva valves,
John.
Thanks for your reply Jamie;there is no such switch on this
oscilloscope. It is very old.
 
Oscilloscopes of that general design were not calibrated at all. About all
you can do is apply a known signal and use that as the calibration standard.

Yes, most inexpensive scopes were also AC coupled. The "zero" will be a line
through the waveform with equal area above it and below it. Even this will
be in error if the waveform you are viewing contains a DC component or
contains very low frequencies

"John Marsh" <jmarsh1000@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:18f0c9bf.0405260229.20c67492@posting.google.com...
Hi everyone,
I have an ancient Heathkit 10-12U oscilloscope,full of valves (tubes)
and great for airing laundry. It seems to be only AC coupled; i.e.
connecting a steady DC source produces a brief jump of the trace. If I
connect a source of pulsed DC which peaks at 9V, how do I interpret &
calibrate the trace? Pulse generator is a 555 timer as astable.
Viva valves,
John.
 
"John Marsh" <jmarsh1000@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:18f0c9bf.0405260229.20c67492@posting.google.com...
Hi everyone,
I have an ancient Heathkit 10-12U oscilloscope,full of valves (tubes)
and great for airing laundry. It seems to be only AC coupled; i.e.
connecting a steady DC source produces a brief jump of the trace. If I
connect a source of pulsed DC which peaks at 9V, how do I interpret &
calibrate the trace? Pulse generator is a 555 timer as astable.
Viva valves,
John.
You adjust the calibrate (if it has one) until the trace has 9 vertical
divisions on the graticule (if it has one).
 

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