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Dave M wrote:
... Here are some attributions that elaborate on the effects of a probe on the overall bandwidth of a scope/probe combination. http://books.google.com/books?id=xHA...0probe&f=false http://www.adler-instrumentos.es/ima...%C3%B1al.pd f pg 3 http://www.freelists.org/post/si-lis...nt-equipment,9 http://www.analog.com/library/analog...cd/vol41n1.pdf pg 13 As you can see from the documents, the scope and probe bandwidths do interact as the RMS sum of the two. The vertical bandwidth or risetime of scopes is specified at the scope's input connector. If the bandwidth specification includes the probe, it will be specified as such. In those cases, the scope's bandwidth will be specified separately, and will be higher than the scope/probe combination. Vertical bandwidth on many high quality scopes will be described in their manuals or spec sheets when using a variety of probes, and will reflect the equivalent bandwidth accordingly. I'm interested in seeing info on the Tektronix way that proves that I am mistaken. I provided several sources that defend my statements. Did you read the sources that I provided links for? All quite credible sources. Did you do the math, or is your conclusion just an opinion? How would you calculate the combined risetime/bandwidth of a scope/probe combination? Please don't interpret my questions as being confrontational, I'm genuinely interested in learning if the technique that I used for years in calibration labs was, in fact, correct or totally wrong. The technique that we used was this: Using a high bandwidth scope, measure its risetime without the probe being connected (scope connected directly to a fast-rise pulse generator). Connect the probe being calibrated to the scope input, and connect the probe tip directly to the pulse generator output. Measure the resulting pulse risetime. Using the formula that I gave previously (rearranged to find the probe's risetime), calculate the probe's risetime and bandwidth. This method of measuring the performance of a probe worked quite well for the lab and our customers for the years that I was a cal technician (commercial and military). I started looking for a reference that I could trust - and I found it in a Tektronix note - a note that totally supports your position. Ooops! I was wrong - with a misplaced sense of what one can measure with Tektronix scopes. Sorry.... I appreciate your level tone though! http://www.tek.com/Measurement/App_N...55_18024_0.pdf Brian Whatcott Altus OK |
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