I just bought a used oscilloscope from a local surplus parts place. It is a 15 MHz B+K Precision 1477 which I got for $100. I got 2 new probes thrown into the deal for free - one a switcheable 10x/1x, the other a 1x. There is no indication of what voltage they are rated for though and the shop wasn't able to tell me either. The shop owner seemed doubtful about putting the high voltage of a tube amp into the scope. My understanding is that if using the 10x probe the scope will only see 1/10 the voltage so it shouldn't be a problem provided the probe is rated for the high voltage.
He suggested using a capacitor in series with the probe to block the high DC voltage (just in case) as it's only the AC that is of interest anyway. It makes sense to me but is there something I'm missing? Some reason not to use the capacitor? If not what would be a good value to use to ensure no relevant frequencies are blocked?
Thanks,
Greg
He suggested using a capacitor in series with the probe to block the high DC voltage (just in case) as it's only the AC that is of interest anyway. It makes sense to me but is there something I'm missing? Some reason not to use the capacitor? If not what would be a good value to use to ensure no relevant frequencies are blocked?
Thanks,
Greg
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