dau
Electrical
- Dec 6, 2002
- 29
Hello Forum,
I'm toiling just with a Frequency compensated voltage divider followed by a G=1 buffer. The divider is 100k//150p and 900k//16p,1Vpp up to 10 MHz. Now I adjust it so that the sine-output of the opamp is 0.9*Vin. Channel 1 of a 10:1 probe directly connected to the BNC at the divider input, ch 2 at the output of the opamp. The frequency response is ok. If I now connect a 1:1 probe with approx. 460 Ohm to the BNC and compare the waveform at this 1:1 probe tip (ch1) with the amp output (ch2) the frequency response is worse. Shouldn't a correctly adjusted divider have the real value of 1Meg ? Is the input capacitance masked by the 10:1 probe? If I now connect a simple coax cable to the BNC input the output is even rising a little.Can anyone tell me what's the right procedure to adjust such a divider?
Regards
I'm toiling just with a Frequency compensated voltage divider followed by a G=1 buffer. The divider is 100k//150p and 900k//16p,1Vpp up to 10 MHz. Now I adjust it so that the sine-output of the opamp is 0.9*Vin. Channel 1 of a 10:1 probe directly connected to the BNC at the divider input, ch 2 at the output of the opamp. The frequency response is ok. If I now connect a 1:1 probe with approx. 460 Ohm to the BNC and compare the waveform at this 1:1 probe tip (ch1) with the amp output (ch2) the frequency response is worse. Shouldn't a correctly adjusted divider have the real value of 1Meg ? Is the input capacitance masked by the 10:1 probe? If I now connect a simple coax cable to the BNC input the output is even rising a little.Can anyone tell me what's the right procedure to adjust such a divider?
Regards