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#1
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I am restoring an old TRC-455, and want to align it by Sams. I have a Tek scope,
but a standard 10x probe. Do I need a probe with a certain bandwidth? Vinnie S. |
#2
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Vinnie S. wrote:
I am restoring an old TRC-455, and want to align it by Sams. I have a Tek scope, but a standard 10x probe. Do I need a probe with a certain bandwidth? Vinnie S. You need to be able to see the audio waveform. If you can stretch it out enough to see the RF waveform, you can "see" harmonics if it's not a perfect sine wave. Every complex waveform is a lot of sine waves. |
#3
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Vinnie;
The answer is "it depends". If the alignment procedure requires you to measure voltages and adjust for specific values then the scope and the probe must have a bandwidth beyond the max frequency of interest. For example at 27 MHz the scope and probe have to be rated for more than 30 MHz. Most bandwidth specifications are at the "3 db" points meaning the response is down by 50% at the stated bandwidth. Depending on the filter used on the scope input channel the scope response may roll off at 3 db per octave, doubling in frequency, or faster. Of course the response starts to roll of somewhat before that point. Now if all you're looking for is a relative reading, peak response or modulation checks for example, a lower bandwidth scope and probe could work so long as the response is enough to give a good display on the screen. I would guess a 15MHz bandwidth scope may work OK. One other thing to watch out for is circuit loading due to the scope probe resistance AND capacitance. The probe capacitance can be in the order of some 10's of picofards. This can cause serious circuit detuning if you use a probe in a circuit where the tuning capacitance is in the same range as the probe to as much as 10 to 20 times that value. I've seen a lot of very nice 30 to 100 MHz scopes for sale at various hamfests for very reasonable prices. If you don't have one and you plan on doing more electronics work investing in a good scope is a good investment. -- Regards, Leland C. Scott KC8LDO "Vinnie S." wrote in message news ![]() I am restoring an old TRC-455, and want to align it by Sams. I have a Tek scope, but a standard 10x probe. Do I need a probe with a certain bandwidth? Vinnie S. |
#4
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On Sun, 03 Jun 2007 21:29:09 -0400, Vinnie S.
wrote: +++I am restoring an old TRC-455, and want to align it by Sams. I have a Tek scope, +++but a standard 10x probe. Do I need a probe with a certain bandwidth? +++ +++Vinnie S. ************* A scope probe with 50 MHz bandwidth will be suficient. The bandwidth of the probe is stated so that you will avoid attenuation issues at high frequencies. Measurements above the rated bandwidth of the scope probe will yield inaccurate measurement levels. If you are just looking for the presence of a signal and the absolute level is not needed then don't worry to much about the bandwidth of the scope probe. james |
#5
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On Wed, 06 Jun 2007 15:21:49 GMT, james wrote:
On Sun, 03 Jun 2007 21:29:09 -0400, Vinnie S. wrote: +++I am restoring an old TRC-455, and want to align it by Sams. I have a Tek scope, +++but a standard 10x probe. Do I need a probe with a certain bandwidth? +++ +++Vinnie S. ************* A scope probe with 50 MHz bandwidth will be suficient. The bandwidth of the probe is stated so that you will avoid attenuation issues at high frequencies. Measurements above the rated bandwidth of the scope probe will yield inaccurate measurement levels. If you are just looking for the presence of a signal and the absolute level is not needed then don't worry to much about the bandwidth of the scope probe. james I just wanted to measure modulation on a TRC-455 that I am restoring. I have a 10x probe with the bandwidth being 60Mhz in the 10x position. But I have bad news. I apparently need and RF generator for alignment of the receiver. I do not own one. I have everything else. So off to ebay I go. Any recommendations? Vinnie S. |
#6
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Vinnie;
Why don't you just try using another radio as the signal source? Run it in to a dummy load. A loop or two around the dummy load may pick up enough signal leakage that you can feed it in to the rig you're setting up. -- Regards, Leland C. Scott KC8LDO "Vinnie S." wrote in message ... On Wed, 06 Jun 2007 15:21:49 GMT, james wrote: On Sun, 03 Jun 2007 21:29:09 -0400, Vinnie S. wrote: +++I am restoring an old TRC-455, and want to align it by Sams. I have a Tek scope, +++but a standard 10x probe. Do I need a probe with a certain bandwidth? +++ +++Vinnie S. ************* A scope probe with 50 MHz bandwidth will be suficient. The bandwidth of the probe is stated so that you will avoid attenuation issues at high frequencies. Measurements above the rated bandwidth of the scope probe will yield inaccurate measurement levels. If you are just looking for the presence of a signal and the absolute level is not needed then don't worry to much about the bandwidth of the scope probe. james I just wanted to measure modulation on a TRC-455 that I am restoring. I have a 10x probe with the bandwidth being 60Mhz in the 10x position. But I have bad news. I apparently need and RF generator for alignment of the receiver. I do not own one. I have everything else. So off to ebay I go. Any recommendations? Vinnie S. |
#7
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On Wed, 06 Jun 2007 18:55:21 -0400, Vinnie S.
wrote: +++On Wed, 06 Jun 2007 15:21:49 GMT, james wrote: +++ +++On Sun, 03 Jun 2007 21:29:09 -0400, Vinnie S. +++wrote: +++ ++++++I am restoring an old TRC-455, and want to align it by Sams. I have a Tek scope, ++++++but a standard 10x probe. Do I need a probe with a certain bandwidth? ++++++ ++++++Vinnie S. +++************* +++ +++A scope probe with 50 MHz bandwidth will be suficient. The bandwidth +++of the probe is stated so that you will avoid attenuation issues at +++high frequencies. Measurements above the rated bandwidth of the scope +++probe will yield inaccurate measurement levels. If you are just +++looking for the presence of a signal and the absolute level is not +++needed then don't worry to much about the bandwidth of the scope +++probe. +++ +++james +++ +++ +++I just wanted to measure modulation on a TRC-455 that I am restoring. I have a +++10x probe with the bandwidth being 60Mhz in the 10x position. +++ +++But I have bad news. I apparently need and RF generator for alignment of the +++receiver. I do not own one. I have everything else. So off to ebay I go. Any +++recommendations? +++ +++Vinnie S. ***************** I have an HP 8656 generator. A bit pricy even still today. I got mine at a fantastic price 8 yrs ago. Bought it when the factory was closing down and moving as excess equiptment for around $400. They are still commanding around $700 to $1000. Really for CB work if you can find any of the older B&K CB test equiptment in decent shape I would suggest those. Equiptment like HP, Wavetek, and others are very pricy for home test equiptment. james |
#8
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James;
One of the problems buying used test equipment is the manufacture finds there is some weakness in the design resulting in frequent failures, one reason why they may quit manufacturing it. I don't know if the HP signal generator you mentioned is one such item. I remember in some back issues of QEX somebody came up with a modification to replace a section in the output of a HP signal generator that was known to be particularly failure prone, the original part used isn't available anymore if I remember right. Others have picked up old Tech scopes real cheap that had problems, hoping to fix them, and finding out that the blown parts, like Tunnel Diodes, are now almost imposable to find since almost nobody makes them anymore. And the ones that do, if you can find the exact one you need, want such a high price for them it isn't worth it. -- Regards, Leland C. Scott KC8LDO "james" wrote in message ... On Wed, 06 Jun 2007 18:55:21 -0400, Vinnie S. wrote: +++On Wed, 06 Jun 2007 15:21:49 GMT, james wrote: +++ +++On Sun, 03 Jun 2007 21:29:09 -0400, Vinnie S. +++wrote: +++ ++++++I am restoring an old TRC-455, and want to align it by Sams. I have a Tek scope, ++++++but a standard 10x probe. Do I need a probe with a certain bandwidth? ++++++ ++++++Vinnie S. +++************* +++ +++A scope probe with 50 MHz bandwidth will be suficient. The bandwidth +++of the probe is stated so that you will avoid attenuation issues at +++high frequencies. Measurements above the rated bandwidth of the scope +++probe will yield inaccurate measurement levels. If you are just +++looking for the presence of a signal and the absolute level is not +++needed then don't worry to much about the bandwidth of the scope +++probe. +++ +++james +++ +++ +++I just wanted to measure modulation on a TRC-455 that I am restoring. I have a +++10x probe with the bandwidth being 60Mhz in the 10x position. +++ +++But I have bad news. I apparently need and RF generator for alignment of the +++receiver. I do not own one. I have everything else. So off to ebay I go. Any +++recommendations? +++ +++Vinnie S. ***************** I have an HP 8656 generator. A bit pricy even still today. I got mine at a fantastic price 8 yrs ago. Bought it when the factory was closing down and moving as excess equiptment for around $400. They are still commanding around $700 to $1000. Really for CB work if you can find any of the older B&K CB test equiptment in decent shape I would suggest those. Equiptment like HP, Wavetek, and others are very pricy for home test equiptment. james |
#9
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On Sun, 10 Jun 2007 12:03:04 -0400, "Leland C. Scott"
wrote: +++James; +++ +++One of the problems buying used test equipment is the manufacture finds +++there is some weakness in the design resulting in frequent failures, one +++reason why they may quit manufacturing it. +++ +++I don't know if the HP signal generator you mentioned is one such item. I +++remember in some back issues of QEX somebody came up with a modification to +++replace a section in the output of a HP signal generator that was known to +++be particularly failure prone, the original part used isn't available +++anymore if I remember right. ****************** The HP generator I have is a standard that HP sold for commercial and industrial use throughout much of the 1990's but now is discontinued. The one I have is a HP8656A with the attenuator replaced with the same one that was used in the HP8656B. One of the HP8656A's main weakness was that of the attentuator at the output. The genreator has an input for connection to a high stability time base which improves the performance especially when using it at frequencies around 800 MHz. I also have a 10MHz. high stability TXCO that keeps the accuracy of the generator frequency set to less than +/- 1 Hz. Obsolescence is not necessarily due to problem plagued unit though that can be a cause. WIth HP8656/57 series that may not have been the problem. Lower demand and cost of manufacturing can also lead to obsolescence. Lack of demand can be due to not having features and options that the end user demands. Often a new model is introduced with more bells and whistles as well as defect fixes that will all but obsolete the previous model. I have been very happy with the unit I have. The front keypad is still in very excellent shape as the unit I have was on the factory floor and control of it was via the GPIB connection from an HP workstation. james |
#10
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![]() "james" wrote in message ... I have been very happy with the unit I have. The front keypad is still in very excellent shape as the unit I have was on the factory floor and control of it was via the GPIB connection from an HP workstation. Well that's good. I'm a bit leery of spending big bucks on used test gear since you don't know what the last guy did to it abuse wise, something stupid like keying up the xmit with the signal generator still attached. I found that if the equipment looks good cosmetically there is a good chance the guy selling it didn't abuse the equipment, much. I would like to get a nice spectrum analyzer but anything worth having is in the $2K range, a bit too much to take a chance on it from a total stranger. I could spent $6K on a nice new portable LCD one. 8-)) -- Regards, Leland C. Scott KC8LDO |
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