Thanks for the help in my other o-scope thread. I ended up getting an older SS 20MHz Kenwood CS-1021 for $59 plus almost as much for shipping...plus almost as much again for a 10x/1x probe with all the tips. Now I need some help checking it out to make sure it's functional (it was advertised as fully functional).
First off...power cord has ground prong missing and it affects the scope. I attached an alligator clip to a chassis screw and grounded that...and that made a difference. I have power cords and will put a good cord on it soon enough (if I keep it).
All knobs/switches appear to function...they all have some sort of affect on something and many of them are (I'm pretty sure) functioning fine.
I did the probe compensation procedure using the front panel test point and was able to complete that successfully no problem. I was able to get the display to show just a few cycles and to be stable and in a fixed position on the screen. Does that right there mean that the scope is triggering properly? It was in Auto mode at the time.
This triggering business is what I'm most concerned about (at least for checking the functionality of the unit). I've been trying to 'look' at the waveform put out by my metronome when set to 'tune'. In 'tune' mode the metronome puts out 440Hz, or 441Hz, or 442Hz, etc. and this tone is adjustable via the volume control. I plugged into the headphone jack of the metronome and took the signal from the tip and sleeve of the cable. I can't get this to look much like anything coherent. The trigger controls do affect it...sometimes...and I can certainly make it look worse but I can't get a smooth, focused waveform on the screen. Should I be? I tried adjusting the metronome volume and it had no effect...tried flipping all sorts of switches and turning the trigger knobs and they usually do something...but still not a smooth waveform.
I do not have a signal generator yet...I was hoping to use the metronome for now (I also have a digital keyboard).
I did read some stuff on o-scopes before it arrived and since...but I'm just not 100% sure that it's functioning correctly. It's probably just pilot error. Any help appreciated.
BTW - compared to new stuff this older stuff just feels SOOOOO solid. Couple of trimmer pots have bent shafts but work perfectly.
First off...power cord has ground prong missing and it affects the scope. I attached an alligator clip to a chassis screw and grounded that...and that made a difference. I have power cords and will put a good cord on it soon enough (if I keep it).
All knobs/switches appear to function...they all have some sort of affect on something and many of them are (I'm pretty sure) functioning fine.
I did the probe compensation procedure using the front panel test point and was able to complete that successfully no problem. I was able to get the display to show just a few cycles and to be stable and in a fixed position on the screen. Does that right there mean that the scope is triggering properly? It was in Auto mode at the time.
This triggering business is what I'm most concerned about (at least for checking the functionality of the unit). I've been trying to 'look' at the waveform put out by my metronome when set to 'tune'. In 'tune' mode the metronome puts out 440Hz, or 441Hz, or 442Hz, etc. and this tone is adjustable via the volume control. I plugged into the headphone jack of the metronome and took the signal from the tip and sleeve of the cable. I can't get this to look much like anything coherent. The trigger controls do affect it...sometimes...and I can certainly make it look worse but I can't get a smooth, focused waveform on the screen. Should I be? I tried adjusting the metronome volume and it had no effect...tried flipping all sorts of switches and turning the trigger knobs and they usually do something...but still not a smooth waveform.
I do not have a signal generator yet...I was hoping to use the metronome for now (I also have a digital keyboard).
I did read some stuff on o-scopes before it arrived and since...but I'm just not 100% sure that it's functioning correctly. It's probably just pilot error. Any help appreciated.
BTW - compared to new stuff this older stuff just feels SOOOOO solid. Couple of trimmer pots have bent shafts but work perfectly.
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