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| General Electronics Chat This forum is for general chat about electronics, eg: Dont know what a part does? Dont know how to read a circuit? Want to get an opinion? |
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| | #1 |
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i cant understand something.on the oscillator there is a swich tha changes the mode :GRD,DC,AC.when i put a cosine pulse at the ac mode i can see it with it exact price of volt p-p,but when i turn it is shows me again a cosine siqnal but this time with a a smaller price.is there an explanation? Also if i put a cosin signal with half price 0volt what i will see on my oscillator,in mode DC and in mode AC?And if the price is of the generator is +10v? :shock: | |
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| | #2 |
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I hope I understand what you are asking about: What you are looking at is the coupling on the input of an oscilloscope. AC: In the AC mode, not DC is passed to the amplifiers and displayed. This is useful when you have a dc bias present on a signal you want to ignore. DC: This will pass most anything such as an AC wave that oscillates between 0 and 10Vpp (Avg value, 5V). GND: This grounds the input, usually so you can adjust the position of 0 on the scopes screen. | |
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| | #3 |
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yes u are right!!i was talking for oscilloscopes!!!sorry and what happents if we put an 10vp-p signal input? | |
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| | #4 |
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What happens with your 10Vpp input depends on the signal. If the signal is for instance a sine with no DC offset, the AC and DC settings make no difference. If it has a 6V DC offset (min value is 1, max is 11), then on DC, it will swing between 1 and 11. On AC it will go from -5 to 5.
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