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| BK Precision 4086AWG 80 MHz Arbitrary Function Generator |
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| coromonadalix:
Im not aware theses gen series are hackable .... not like Rigols or Siglent ones who options are hackable, but did not saw anithing related to amplitude levels and you dont specify what amplitudes levels you need .. it wont help you get some answers ... do yourself some firmware dumps, eeprom dumps inside of it, and do reverse engineering ?? and with patience maybe someone can or will help :-+ |
| TurboTom:
Why does this 500ml bottle of beer only contain half a liter? There must be a way to put one liter in, I've got to discuss this with the brewery... :palm: Sorry for my sarcasm, but a modern AWG's output stage is quite a tricky design, usually consisting of several, stacked current feedback opamps that, depending on the selected range may or may not get used (thus the array of relays). Offset mixing is often taking place via a separate DAC and passively added to the waveform signal in order not to waste signal resolution, fidelity and to introduce distortion. On these output designs, the factor limiting the output amplitude usually isn't gain-bandwidth product of the amplifier but rather slew rate at the required drive currents. Though the amplifiers obviously provide some headroom that could possibly be exploited, I'm very much in doubt that you will find any manufacturer of such gear who would support you in an attempt to do so. A dedicated power amplifier after the AWG's output is definitely the way to go. |
| mawyatt:
--- Quote from: TurboTom on May 17, 2023, 04:46:30 pm ---Why does this 500ml bottle of beer only contain half a liter? There must be a way to put one liter in, I've got to discuss this with the brewery... :palm: Sorry for my sarcasm, but a modern AWG's output stage is quite a tricky design, usually consisting of several, stacked current feedback opamps that, depending on the selected range may or may not get used (thus the array of relays). Offset mixing is often taking place via a separate DAC and passively added to the waveform signal in order not to waste signal resolution, fidelity and to introduce distortion. On these output designs, the factor limiting the output amplitude usually isn't gain-bandwidth product of the the amplifier but rather slew rate at the required drive currents. Though the amplifiers obviously provide some headroom that could possibly be exploited, I'm very much in doubt that you will find any manufacturer of such gear who would support you in an attempt to do so. A dedicated power amplifier after the AWG's output is definitely the way to go. --- End quote --- Exactly :-+ Best, |
| pienari:
Well.. i havent found any info from web , maybe BK is so rare. :blah: |
| mawyatt:
--- Quote from: pienari on May 17, 2023, 06:25:27 pm ---Well.. i havent found any info from web , maybe BK is so rare. :blah: --- End quote --- Minicircuits has a large array of various RF/MW amplifiers. https://www.minicircuits.com/WebStore/Amplifiers.html You can look around here for AWG Buffer Amplifiers that are a specific for a given voltage, current, power and frequency range. There's no Swiss Army Knife Amplifier that covers all bases for, frequency, power, voltage, current, linearity, and noise we're aware of, if you find one please enlighten us :-+ Best, |
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