I have a Rigol DS1054Z scope and a Siglent SDG2042X wavegen and I am working with signals around 25-50mVpp and 1 - 10kHz. I'm feeding the sine wave through a BNC tee with one end going directly into the scope and the other going to my circuit, connected with a BNC -> Grabber adapter (
https://www.digikey.ca/product-detail/en/pomona-electronics/3788/501-1029-ND/603339). As soon as I connect the adapter the signal starts to jump all over the place on the scope and it becomes very difficult to get it to consistently trigger. It triggers fine with the circuit end of the BNC left unconnected. The leads on the adapter are fairly long so I cobbled together my own connector with a female BNC connector with some short wires soldered to it in an attempt to mitigate any problems that may be associated with the cable length, but that only offered minor improvement. Amplifying the signal and triggering of off that offers some improvement as well but does not completely solve the problem. If I do a single shot measurement the waveform generally looks pretty clean.
Are my issues due to limitations imposed by my test equipment (i.e. the ability to trigger on a low amplitude signal, ability to generate that signal) or my test set up? What can I do to improve my results? As a workaround I can generate a pulse to trigger on for testing purposes but if I can improve my set up or input circuitry that would be ideal.
As an aside - I've been using the scope to measure RMS voltage and I'm finding that the measurements are wildly different between channels for the same signal, vertical scale, etc between channels. I don't expect great accuracy but they differ by as much as a couple volts and neither agree with my multimeter. Is this typical of scope measurements?