| Products > Test Equipment |
| Can my Rigol dg1022Z counter be defective ? |
| << < (3/4) > >> |
| Njk:
Anyway for DG800 I witnessed it's working somehow. Perhaps there can be variations from one sample to the other. |
| bd139:
It'll work for a bit untily you accidentally exceed the miniscule voltage it'll handle before dying :-DD |
| Njk:
Well, there is some protection in the form of clamping diodes. Although the input range is quite limited indeed and generally it's not a unique instrument in that regard. As usual, RTFM before use. |
| Circlotron:
--- Quote from: Yannick99 on November 14, 2023, 02:27:41 pm --- --- Quote from: Circlotron on November 13, 2023, 11:19:34 pm --- Edit -> I misread the title. I thought it was talking about the later DG1022Z. --- End quote --- Yes sorry it's dg1022Z --- End quote --- The running title changes from post #10 onward, oddly enough…. Okay, tried out mine last night and and the counter seems to be very level sensitive. Started off with 10V p/p sine wave and the counter sat at zero. At 2V it was a bit jumpy and wouldn’t go above 1.3MHz. At 1V p/p it worked great all the way to 25MHz. Input clamping diodes were mentioned. I’ll put the scope on it and see if that is happening. |
| Yannick99:
--- Quote ---The running title changes from post #10 onward, oddly enough…. --- End quote --- Yes I corrected the title :p --- Quote ---At 1V p/p it worked great all the way to 25MHz --- End quote --- Do you remember the trigger sense and trigger level it was set ? --- Quote ---Input clamping diodes were mentioned. I’ll put the scope on it and see if that is happening --- End quote --- Ok thanks, let me know! Yannick |
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