tx1961whaler
Vice Admiral
- Joined
- May 31, 2008
- Messages
- 5,197
Re: Tow of shame!! 1972 Evinrude 65hp no spark
You can use the o'scope to measure peak voltage. It's kind of difficult to explain quickly how to use it, but here goes:
hook it up using a BNC cable (scope side) with 2 alligator clips on the end (engine side). One alligator clip is ground (shield), and the other is the signal (center conductor of the BNC).
The big knob on the left is the vertical scale control. It controls how many volts/division are on the scale. Set it according to the maximum voltage you would expect the signal to be, like you were using a voltmeter. Set to coupling button to AC.
The big knob on the right is is the horizontal scale control. It controls the amount of time/division that the scope trace is traveling at. If you set it for a longer time, the scope trace travels more slowly, and you can capture a longer pulse, but it may miss short pulses.
The trigger level control determines the voltage at which the scope's horizontal trace will "trigger" and start reading when you move that know, a flat trace or arrow should show up on the screen to show wjere the trigger level is.
To see if the scope is working hook the "signal" alligator clip to the calibration lug on the front of the scope. There should also be a ground lug. The cal lug has a preset signal coming out of it (probably printed below the lug) and you should be able to get the scope to show the signal, normally the first time by randomly twisting the vertical and horizontal and trigger knobs until something shows up
If you can never get a trace line going across the scope, then it may be broken.
You can use the o'scope to measure peak voltage. It's kind of difficult to explain quickly how to use it, but here goes:
hook it up using a BNC cable (scope side) with 2 alligator clips on the end (engine side). One alligator clip is ground (shield), and the other is the signal (center conductor of the BNC).
The big knob on the left is the vertical scale control. It controls how many volts/division are on the scale. Set it according to the maximum voltage you would expect the signal to be, like you were using a voltmeter. Set to coupling button to AC.
The big knob on the right is is the horizontal scale control. It controls the amount of time/division that the scope trace is traveling at. If you set it for a longer time, the scope trace travels more slowly, and you can capture a longer pulse, but it may miss short pulses.
The trigger level control determines the voltage at which the scope's horizontal trace will "trigger" and start reading when you move that know, a flat trace or arrow should show up on the screen to show wjere the trigger level is.
To see if the scope is working hook the "signal" alligator clip to the calibration lug on the front of the scope. There should also be a ground lug. The cal lug has a preset signal coming out of it (probably printed below the lug) and you should be able to get the scope to show the signal, normally the first time by randomly twisting the vertical and horizontal and trigger knobs until something shows up
If you can never get a trace line going across the scope, then it may be broken.