- So this thing can not be used on probing high voltage like mains powered AC to DC power supply circuit ?
- How good is this probe's performance compared to using the common two probes trick with both ground clips connected to probe differential signal ?
1. Not without attenuation, no.
2. I don't think that will always work, since the scope still measures the voltage referenced to mains earth. I'll look into it further, though. However, either way it still uses two channels, whereas my solution should only use the one.
FWIW Hammil, I would deal with the attenuation inside the case and PSU outside the case (if you've run out of space).
Conducted noise might only be 16uV, radiated noise (L1 & tracks) is another matter altogether.
That might be an option, yeah. I've ordered a few boards from oshpark, so I should be able to see if there's a visible effect from noise.
Using a 10x passive probe won't help with common-mode range if you do it like this, I would change the design so that it has two probe inputs instead (something like the Tek AM502)
http://www.barrytech.com/tektronix/tektm500/tekam502.html
However, I'm not sure how well a pair of cheap passive probes will match (probably not very well, destroying your CMRR).
Still it would be an improvement on using the math function on the scope, better usable range and only one scope channel used...
Thanks for the thoughts. What I'll probably end up doing is having a (selectable?) x10 or x100 attenuator inside the case, and advise that the probe be used in x1 mode.
Out of curiosity, though, if I did have two probe inputs, where would I connect them, and how would this improve the common-mode range?
I think you still need to use insulation 1:1 mains transformer. In case your scope is powered from different phase than DUT, you can have like 400V between scope ground and either input of the probe. It's even worse if you need 2 or more channels at the same time: common mode may be a problem. Not because attenuation, but rather plain semiconductor damage because of high voltage.
I can see why that would be a problem, however using a transformer will add a high-pass filter unless I used some switching trickery, which would vastly increase the complexity of the design. Thank you for the information, though.
One solution for the common-mode problem, I believe, would be to simply have a (selectable, of course) attenuator referenced to mains earth itself.... Other than that, I can't seem to find any simple fixes. I may just have to accept this as a design limitation.