Brian,
Sorry I wasn't clearer on my original post. My scope has three modes for triggering, Internal (using either channel 1 or 2), Line, which the documentation says to be used for triggering on signals running at line frequency, and External. The only one that I can feed a signal to is External so I tried feeding a 5 v signal from my power supply. The signal was DC since I don't have a variable power supply which can do AC and DC. When I fed the oscilloscope a 200 khz signal, it seemed to behave exactly the same as when I used the Internal trigger. Selected 'Auto' gave me an unstable sine wave, it basically was continually rolling across the screen. Switching to Normal make the screen go blank.
One thing did happen while playing around, however. I disconnected the external signal and went back to just using the the internal trigger. Some combination of events, switching from Auto to Normal, playing with the slope adjustment, etc. and suddenly when I switched to Normal I had a stable wave form. I could change the frequency and/or wave shape coming in and the wave remained stable on Normal. I was even able to play with the slope and get it to disappear and then reappear. I then pulled out the trigger adjustment too switch from positive to negative slope and the wave disappeared. From that point on, nothing I did allowed me to see the wave in Normal mode even though I had the slope setting in the same spot where it was working previously.
Are there things I can check in the trigger circuitry just using a multimeter instead of a second scope?
I appreciate the help.
Thanks.
Jim
- - - Updated - - -
The more I investigate this issue, the more I'm starting to think it is related to the push/pull slope adjustment switch which governs the trigger voltage. I fed a sine wave into channel one and made sure it showed up on auto. I then switched to Normal. Not surprisingly nothing showed up. I slowly adjusted the slope adjustment, turning the knob left and right. Still nothing. I pulled the switch out (which switches to negative slope) and did the same. Nothing. I then put the slope mostly in the middle of the range and just kept pulling on the switch and pushing it in, maybe about once a second or so. At some point when I did it I saw a trace flash on the screen and disappear. I kept doing this and when I saw the flash of the trace again, I started to adjust the slope slowly and I managed to get a trace to hold for quite a while. I could adjust the slope and I could change the starting point of the trace until it disappeared, and then I was able to bring it back again. If I pulled (or pushed, depending on m starting state) the knob, the trace would disappear again and I would have to do my push/pull trick until I saw it appear again. I was able to find the trace both on the positive slope as well as the negative slope, but I always had to do the push/pull trick to get something to appear.
Jim