M
MassiveProng
As alone as you on a Friday night?
I think there is a fly buzzing around the room. Perhaps it's only
flatulence.
Of no consequence either way.
As alone as you on a Friday night?
MassiveProng said:If you have used test gear, and you do not intend to PAY to have it
calibrated, you be best off leaving it all the **** ALONE!
For frequency, you can use WWV. You need:
A short wave radio with an audio output.
Perhaps an audio filter tuned to about 1KHz.
A generator you wish to calibrate near the WWV frequency.
A frequency counter that is not too far off.
Procedure:
Tune in WWV.
Put wire on generator and set it to WWV-1KHz
Listen for tone and move stuff around until it sounds good.
Feed tone into the filter.
Place the counter on the output of the filter.
The number on the counter is X Hz away from 1KHz when the generator is XHz
off from WWV-1KHz.
LOL
You're a real ray of sunshine, aren't you?
Now go out and play in traffic while we adults talk about serious
stuff..
TMT
Thanks for the (positive) comments so far.
I look forward to any more you might want to offer.
Any circuits or examples others have done?
Any cal boxes that anyone have built?
TMT
True, 0.01% resistors are available, *but* they are extremely
expensive (over $100 each) and they are made when and if the
manufacturer sees fit to do so.
You're amazing. You don't even know what equipment, qualifications or needs
he has, yet you're right there with THE answer. Lets take an example. I
have a 20 year old Hitachi scope as you know, the voltage cal is way off
(~20%) in a couple of ranges. Are you suggesting that I should drag it
across town, spend $200 and be without it for 2 weeks just to get it
adjusted by some obstinate, E-1 grade line tech, instead of using a brand
new DMM w .03% accuracy to tweak it myself? I'm quite sure that my Micronta
is up to the task to be honest.
MassiveProng said:You are to be disappointed. The scale dial on that scope is likely
fitted with resistors, and one of them has shifted, which shifts all
the dividers on the dial below it.
It is not a calibration issue. It is a repair issue.
So shove it up your ass, you E-1 grade dipshit.
Your micronta? Bwuahahahahahah!
I have a well stocked test bench at home containing a range of analog,
digital and RF test equipment as I am sure most of you also do.
Well the question I have is how do you handle the calibration of your
equipment? What do you use for calibration standards for resistance,
voltage, current and frequency?
This works if you only need about 1 part in a million.
just use it for the timebase all the time. Alternately, use a Rb
source. They were also used in cell sites and are available easily.
They cannot move more than about a part in 100 million and they make
excellent time bases for frequency counters.
<snippety>
I could post pictures... ;-)
Hmm. Excellent question.
For frequency, I actually have three different references, all
GPS-
locked. One is my primary reference, an HP Z3801, as retired from a
cellphone site. The second and third ones are both combination clocks
and freq-references, one from Trak Systems (now Trak Microwave) and
the other from Odetics/Zypher. All three use a very stable OCXO that
is constantly disciplined by the GPS receiver.
Long-term accuracy is on the order of 1E10 -11th or so. In other
words, about as good as you can get without being NIST certified.
I don't have good primary voltage or current references as yet.
That's on the 'Acquire' list for scrounging this year. For resistance,
simple Pomona plugs with 0.01% tolerance resistors work pretty well
for 2-wire. For anything more, I will probably have to rent one of the
Fluke all-in-ones.
I'm just beginning to gather the goodies I need for calibrating
my
O-scope collection. That will eventually consist of Tektronix leveled
sine-wave generators, and one of their CG5xxx series calibration
generators.
Keep the peace(es).
A lot of good points have been made already so I'll just add a small
one.
Don't mess with calibration of quality equipment unless you have
reason to believe the calibration is off AND THAT IS ADVERSELY
AFFECTING YOUR WORK PRODUCTS. An amazing amount of electronics work
has been done using equipment with non-current calibration stickers,
some of which was out of calibration.
If metrology is something that interests you as a hobby, then jump
into it and have fun. Tim's last paragraph ought to be printed and
framed.
Chuck
A *real* good example of calibration adjustments that interact isthis is good advice,because without a service manual and cal procedure,you
have no way of knowing what adjustments INTERACT with others.
Adjust a power supply,and gain and timing goes out the window.
Freq.response tweaks can affect more than one area of the signal.
for example,
TEK 475s have multiple vertical gain adjustments,and different adjustments
for the 2/5-10mv ranges.And the gain affects F-response.
Ken said:For frequency, you can use WWV. You need:
A short wave radio with an audio output.
Perhaps an audio filter tuned to about 1KHz.
A generator you wish to calibrate near the WWV frequency.
A frequency counter that is not too far off.
Procedure:
Tune in WWV.
Put wire on generator and set it to WWV-1KHz
Listen for tone and move stuff around until it sounds good.
Feed tone into the filter.
Place the counter on the output of the filter.
The number on the counter is X Hz away from 1KHz when the generator is XHz
off from WWV-1KHz.
Aren't you reliant on the stability of the DVD player reference clockMassiveProng said:Joe Kane's audio video set up discs on Laser Disc, and DVD, and now
HD DVD are the bee's knees for a lot of audio spectrum sine wave
tones.
DVD $20, Player $40 TV and Audio gear already owned.
No. One part in 100 million (10^-8) is 100 times better than wwvKen said:This works if you only need about 1 part in a million.
One PPM is enough for almost all the test equipment you will find on
places like ebay.
You can do better if you average over longer periods.
[.....]
just use it for the timebase all the time. Alternately, use a Rb
source. They were also used in cell sites and are available easily.
They cannot move more than about a part in 100 million and they make
excellent time bases for frequency counters.
I thing someone messed up a decimal. You just made a Rb clock 100 times
worse that WWV.
Glenn said:I agree with Prong on this one. I've worked in repair and broadcast
for 35 years. Unless you have a compelling reason to change it, leave
it alone. Of course, this assumes it's good stuff to begin with like
Fluke and Tek.
Bud-- said:I believe the color subcarrier in a color TV is phase locked to the
transmitted signal and, for network studio transmissions, is derived
from a cesium clock. From what I have read it is more accurate than WWV
and doesn't require extra equipment other than a TV displaying an image
with a studio source. Frequency is 3.579545 MHz.
Anthony said:If someone doesn't need traceable calibration, then why should they pay
for
it? Especially if they have the resources to do it themselves. I'm
thinking of buying a cheap used Rb time base from e-bay so I can cal my
old Protek freq counter and adjust the timebase on my Hitachi scope, it's
certainly cheaper than having it done. Using a PIC driven by an ordinary
can xtal, and a quartz wristwatch of known accuracy, I was able to tweak
the
xtal to within about 1-2ppm over the course of a week or two. Of course
you know that's impossible, don't you?
[...]
True, 0.01% resistors are available, *but* they are extremely
expensive (over $100 each) and they are made when and if the
manufacturer sees fit to do so.Not so.
RS Components have 0.01% resistors for AU$34.50 (US$26)
Farnell have 0.02% for as little as AU$20
You guys are paying *way* too much. We use Riedon .01% precision resistors
in our A/D products, and pay about 5 bucks apiece. Their site is down at
the moment, but even Digikey has .01% resistors for around the same price:http://www.digikey.com/scripts/DkSearch/dksus.dll?Criteria?Ref=3107&S...