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How To Calibrate Oscilloscope

The document provides instructions for calibrating an oscilloscope in 11 steps: 1) set controls to normal positions, 2) turn on oscilloscope, 3) set VOLTS/DIV to 1, 4) set TIME/DIV to 1 ms, 5) set Trigger to Auto, 6) connect a probe to the input connector, 7) touch the probe to the calibration terminal, 8) adjust TIME/DIV and VOLTS/DIV controls, 9) adjust Y-POS control, 10) adjust X-POS control, 11) adjust Intensity and Focus settings. The calibration process ensures the oscilloscope display is properly configured to view electronic signals.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
229 views2 pages

How To Calibrate Oscilloscope

The document provides instructions for calibrating an oscilloscope in 11 steps: 1) set controls to normal positions, 2) turn on oscilloscope, 3) set VOLTS/DIV to 1, 4) set TIME/DIV to 1 ms, 5) set Trigger to Auto, 6) connect a probe to the input connector, 7) touch the probe to the calibration terminal, 8) adjust TIME/DIV and VOLTS/DIV controls, 9) adjust Y-POS control, 10) adjust X-POS control, 11) adjust Intensity and Focus settings. The calibration process ensures the oscilloscope display is properly configured to view electronic signals.

Uploaded by

nino
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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M.

Ziyanul Hasan
Nino Fahreza
Syahid Akmal
D3 – T. Listrik 2A

How to Calibrate Oscilloscope

1. First, examine all the controls on your scope and set them to normal positions.

For most scopes, all rotating dials should be centered, all pushbuttons should be out,
and all slide switches and paddle switches should be up.

2. Second, Turn your oscilloscope on.

It it’s the old-fashioned CRT kind, give it a minute or two to warm up.

3. Then, Set the VOLTS/DIV control to 1.

This sets the scope to display one volt per vertical division. Depending on the signal
you’re displaying, you may need to increase or decrease this setting, but one volt is a
good starting point.

4. After that, Set the TIME/DIV control to 1 ms.

This control determines the time interval represented by each horizontal division on
the display. Try turning this dial to its slowest setting. Then, turn the dial one notch at
a time and watch the dot speed up until it becomes a solid line.

5. And then, Set the Trigger switch to Auto.

The Auto position enables the oscilloscope to stabilize the trace on a common trigger
point in the waveform. If the trigger mode isn’t set to Auto, the waveform may drift
across the screen, making it difficult to watch.

6. After that Connect a probe to the input connector.

If your scope has more than one input connector, connect the probe to the one labeled
A.

Oscilloscope probes include a probe point, which you connect to the input signal and
a separate ground lead. The ground lead usually has an alligator clip. When testing a
circuit, this clip can be connected to any common ground point within the circuit. In
some probes, the ground lead is detachable, so you can remove it when it isn’t needed.
7. Next Touch the end of the probe to the scope’s calibration terminal.

This terminal provides a sample square wave that you can use to calibrate the scope’s
display. Some scopes have two calibration terminals, labeled 0.2 V and 2 V. If your
scope has two terminals, touch the probe to the 2 V terminal.

For calibrating, it’s best to use an alligator clip test probe. If your test probe has a
pointy tip instead of an alligator clip, you can usually push the tip through the little
hole in the end of the calibration terminal to hold the probe in place.

It isn’t necessary to connect the ground lead of your test probe for calibration.

8. If necessary, adjust the TIME/DIV and VOLTS/DIV controls until the square
wave fits nicely within the display.

9. If necessary, adjust the Y-POS control to center the trace vertically.

10. If necessary, adjust the X-POS control to center the trace horizontally.

11. If necessary, adjust the Intensity and Focus settings to get a clear trace.

12. Finally, Congratulate yourself!

You’re now ready to begin viewing the waveforms of actual electronic signals.

Extra Information :
Remember that the controls of every oscilloscope make and model are unique. Be sure to read the
owner’s manual that came with your oscilloscope to see if there are any other setup or calibration
procedures you need to follow before feeding real signals into your scope.

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