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What are the functions of the three red blocks, i.e. frontend of a osciloscope?

tony_lth

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Hi, Gurus,
I saw a SCH of a osciloscope, as the attachment.
I am curious of the three blocks' function, which are red circled?
Thanks.
Tony Liu
 

Attachments

  • osclloscope.png
    osclloscope.png
    112.5 KB · Views: 240
It looks oddly familiar to old Tek scope probe compensation for coaxial wire and shield inductance.

I tried to simulate it but not specified is the probe impedance or load.

This is what got without the DC rectifier for NET 1 and "guess-timating" White Box Rin = 1M showing -9 dB with break points at up 45 kHz and flat after 100 kHz.

Without more info, that's my best guess. It looks like it is designed for 0 ohm probes with twisted pair.

1709222468742.png
 

    tony_lth

    Points: 2
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Attachment is a picture of the board. I can't find the model #. If you need the model #, I will try to find it.
This should be a very old TEK oscilloscope.
 

Attachments

  • oscilloscope-2.jpg
    oscilloscope-2.jpg
    434.8 KB · Views: 203
My oscilloscope is vintage Tektronix RM504. The instruction manual shows many RC networks used in various places. Sometimes there's a potentiometer in place of the resistance.

One function is called 'high-frequency compensation'. The capacitor is in parallel with a pot. Adjusting it changes the shape of a leading edge formed by the beam. We can adjust it so a waveform onscreen can have sharp attack or soft attack. The aim is to stay true to the signal. My impression is that the scope's circuitry tends to attenuate high frequencies, therefore any signal goes through series capacitors which serve as high pass filters.
 
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My analysis: Other than guessed in post #3, the RC circuit isn't a voltage divider but a divider plus possibly feedback network of the input amplifier U1201. NET2 and NET3 represent input and possibly feedback output of the amplifier. Respectively it's difficult to make assumptions about its transfer function without knowing amplifier characteristic.

High impedance (1 MOhm input) dividers with 100 or more MHz bandwidth are always compensated RC parallel circuits.

The schematic seems either incomplete or incorrect. According to type code, K1200 is a bridge rectifier. But there should be a solid state relays shorting the input coupling capacitor.
 
I agree with @FvM in #8

The intent is to equalize a flat frequency response for a 10:1 or 1:1 probe, beyond tuning than the leadscrew trim cap on the probe to match the scope Zin.
Normally this is in the range of 50MHz to 500 MHz and not 100 kHz as my plot assumed for Net terminations.

Exactly how it is done has missing assumptions.
 
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Hi, FvM and Other Gurus,
here is the SCH more precisely.
The U1201 is marked code as "9857-00", Package QFN52.
I searched and found it should be a product of NS, but can't find its datasheet.
May you comment on the NET2 and NET3 function?
Thanks.
Best,
Tony Liu
--- Updated ---

@FvM @D.A.(Tony)Stewart
 

Attachments

  • OSC_SCH.pdf
    138.9 KB · Views: 189
"NET" nomenclature is used to show interconnected pins to main analog ASIC
without creating a wiring mess on schematic. To keep schematic readable.


Regards, Dana.
 
Hi, Yes, I know it.
I am curious about what the functions of the net2 block and the net3 block are.
Does anyone have datasheet for: The U1201 is marked code as "9857-00", Package QFN52. ?
 

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