In a recent mail from Wes (W7ZOI), he discussed oscilloscopes and test instruments. I thought it was worth sharing his comments with the readers.
Wes wrote -I used to argue that there were three classes of oscilloscope:
- No scope at all
- A scope that would provide an indication of what was happening in a circuit
- A scope that was capable of measurement.
For years my home 'scope was a Tek T-922, which is a dual trace 15 MHz box. It has a plastic box, so it is a problem for transmitter testing. Still, I could do a lot with it. The key is to understand something of the limitations.
I agree with the digital versus analog meter. An analog meter is a really useful thing. But the DVM is also handy and they are so cheap that one can have both. A frequency counter is, as Farhan noted, extremely useful. If you are going to do work with crystal filters, or oscillator stability, you want it to go down to 1 Hz resolution. That is so easy these days that you may as well build it that way. Don't bother with a grid dipper (or anything else that might dip.) That was for the beginning of the last century.
One of the blog readers commented that a high Z volt meter was a good thing. Na, not really. Yes it is good, but you can get there with an op-amp and a 1000 Ohm per volt meter. So I would opt for a rugged, dependable meter that you could use to measure lots of current or normal voltages. Then I would build a high Z input section for the sensitive measurements, and would also buy a cheap DVM. Actually, I have a Fluke 73 DVM that I have really enjoyed. In an earlier time, a VTVM was the center of my lab, but that ended when I got my hands on a proper 'scope.
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