Monday, 17 April 2017

ground - TIP-Barrel test of oscilloscope


I am trying to measure the noise at the output of my buck regulator. I am getting some ripples. I feel that the ground loop caused by my oscilloscope GND ref might have a small impact here.


I was thinking of approaching this via the tip-barrel approach. Now, I wanted to know if I need specialised probes for the TIP-Barrel approach.


Tip pic.


Now, the probe has a met section shown in the image above. Is that GND? If yes, in the tip-barrel approach, is it ok if I just connect a wire from here to my GND reference in the PCB?


This is shown in the image below. Will just a piece of wire from here to my PCB act as a GND?


Tip-Barrel



Answer



Yes, that metal section of your probe is ground, and yes, minimizing loop area when probing fast signals is good.



If you're probe didn't come with one of those nice little ground springs as shown in the second picture, yes, you can build a makeshift one with a small piece of wire. Keep the wire as short as possible, and keep the distance between the point you are probing and ground as close as possible i.e. ground the probe to the closest ground on the board.


Edit:


I went hunting for ground springs, since I realized that I actually had no idea if you could buy them. The most common term is "ground spring", or sometimes "short ground clip", and individual replacements can typically be found by searching " ground spring" or similar. For instance, Digikey has the following (among others):



No comments:

Post a Comment

arduino - Can I use TI's cc2541 BLE as micro controller to perform operations/ processing instead of ATmega328P AU to save cost?

I am using arduino pro mini (which contains Atmega328p AU ) along with cc2541(HM-10) to process and transfer data over BLE to smartphone. I...