The dominant oscilloscope type today is digital. A relatively small number of analog oscilloscopes are still made for educational purposes and low-end DIY kits. The digital revolution in oscilloscope design, initiated by Walter LeCroy over 50 years ago, made possible vast new capabilities and features. Still, it is worthwhile for perspective to look back at […]
FAQ
Budget-priced transistor testing
The field-effect transistor (FET) in one form or another has largely superseded the earlier bipolar junction transistor (BJT). Both can do amplification, oscillation, and switching, but the methods in getting there are quite different as are the input and output impedances. First, by way of background, we’ll look back at the BJT. It contains three […]
Measuring energy without getting fooled
James Prescott Joule, in formulating what is now known as Joule’s Law, found that various forms of energy such as mechanical, electrical and heat are essentially identical and can be changed one into the other. His work formed the theoretical basis for the First Law of Thermodynamics. Joule further investigated the phenomenon of magnetostriction. He […]
Negative resistance: meaning and measurement
It is a fact, verified in theory and by experiment, that no material can conduct electric current with greater efficiency than an ideal conductor having zero resistance. How, then, can the term “negative resistance” have meaning in the real world? First, it is possible to get negative resistance readings on a DVM. If this happens, they […]
Measuring with spectrum analyzers
Modern bench-type and even hand-held oscilloscopes have spectrum analysis capability, providing great added versatility. They can view in rapid succession (or even simultaneously in split-screen format in a mixed-domain instrument) time domain and frequency domain displays of the same signal. Fourier theory tells us that any signal or function in the time domain can be […]
Basics of measuring antenna properties
An antenna is simply a conductor or conductor array, usually metal. But how it is situated and terminated that determines its behavior in transmitting and/or receiving electromagnetic radiation. Let’s start with an antenna that is configured to transmit. An oscillating voltage applied at a terminal will cause current to flow through the antenna. A transmitting […]
Cathode ray tube testing using an oscilloscope
The cathode ray tube (CRT) is what made possible TVs, computer monitors, and oscilloscopes as we know them. CRTs have largely been replaced by flat-screen technologies but CRTs still serve in niche applications. For example, some kinds of military needs still require a CRT display. General-purpose CRTs are no longer manufactured in the U.S., but […]
Measuring active and passive filters
The usual rationale for a filter in electronic circuitry is to reject unwanted portions of a spectrum or at least reduce their amplitudes to acceptable levels without attenuating the desired frequency or range of frequencies. In some situations, active filters are needed to perform this function, and often they are less expensive than alternate solutions […]
Measuring Ebers-Moll model parameters in transistors
If transistor circuits are to be of any use or amenable to diagnostic procedures, we must be able to model them. Even the best electronic test equipment is useless if we don’t know what to look for in the circuits under investigation. Transistors characteristically have multiple modes of conduction. We can view these phenomena in […]
Measuring emitter followers and other transistor configurations
There are three bipolar junction transistor amplifier topologies: common emitter, common base and common collector. (For field-effect transistors, the analogous circuit configurations are common source, common gate and common drain. In the old world of vacuum tubes, they were common cathode, common grid and common plate.) This particular classification derives from the external circuit configuration. […]