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I suspect there is another fault.
Firstly, the spikes indicate excessive high frequency response and your home made probe has the opposite effect of reducing high frequencies passing through it. Wait until you new probe arrives or you may be hiding the fault you are trying to fix.
Regardless of the probe quality, you should see the size of the waveform change as you turn the Y attenuator (volts/div) control. If it doesn't change there is probably a fault in the input amplifier and it could also be responsible for the signal overshoot. The trouble with this kind of fault is you need a second oscilloscope to follow the signal in the first one!
Try these two tests and tell me the results.:
1. Can you confirm the displayed waveform is still very small if you use a short wire to directly link the calibrator output to the center pin of the input socket.
2. If you set the switch to GND the waveform should disappear, leaving just a straight line. Set the Y position so the trace follows the black line across the middle of the screen. Now in the DC position, the square wave should sit on top of the black line, in the AC position it should be sitting half above and half below. Let me know if this is what you see.
I have one of the NRI 2500's, I have the instruction to calibrate this unit it needed. I'd be able to scan it in this weekend if it will help. Then maybe I can get some help to get mine working. I never used it after I built it and it was stored all these years wrapped in plastic with no dirt or moisture. A couple month's ago decided it would be good to start learning the electronics repair all over again. I was able to get it to calibrate once, and then it acted up and now has lost certian areas during the calibration stage to read the 110v wave from inside the unit. I've pulled it apart a few times to check solder joints etc, but nothing has helped. If I move the AC GND DC switch fast or turn or move another switch quickly it brings the wave on the screen only breefly and then blank. I then tried to set the two dots setting but that didn't work either, so what I've read here, the caps could actually be bad. I haven't a working ESR meter yet if they woudl even be able to test those that are this large.
Thanks
Bob
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