I don't own a 50 ohm termnination. Is this a 50R pull down resistor at the input of the scope?
The scope is the DS1052E.
At 15MHz, the squarewave doesn't look like a perfect sine wave on the scope, but it looks very transformed. As I turn the frequency down, it begins to look more and more like squarewave. At 1MHz, it looks about square.
What are your thoughts?
Thanks.M
You wouldn't normally refer to it as a "pull-down" resistor,but yes,it is a 50 Ohm resistor connected across the input of the 'scope input.
A cable terminated in its characteristic impedance no longer looks like their measured capacitance & inductance.
As
alm has pointed out,the "square" wave from this device isn't too spectacular in the first place,particularly when you get up a bit
in fundamental frequency.
If it was a good square wave,you would be seeing the limitations of your Oscilloscope,