Main > Buy/Sell/Trade - non-retail
TIP: This is a great tool for PCB repair !
Angry_Radish:
I've got one of these things, only it's the radio shack branded one, called a probescope..
No clue where the software disk went, but I think I have the rest of the bits.
If there is any intrest I'd be intrested in doing a trade or something for it as I have a full sized scope now :-)
It will be a bit till I can get at it though as I'm moving into a new house this weekend and all my stuff in in boxes.
PM if interested!
Pac-Fan:
--- Quote from: shilmover on November 14, 2007, 03:25:12 am ---Yeah. I noticed that. I asked him if he will post any more and he mentioned he would. Imagine my surprise when he put the BIN at $100.95. I asked him about the increased price and he has ignore me. Oh well. :hissy:
--- End quote ---
Simple solution: No one buy until the price goes back down to $26 and then don't outbid each other. He obviously has a large amount of them.
shardian:
I didn't see this $100 item you mentioned. :dunno He did sell one for $60 BIN.
Level42:
--- Quote from: shardian on November 13, 2007, 03:57:30 pm ---
--- Quote from: Level42 on November 13, 2007, 06:57:25 am ---So you mentioned me for the 15% right ? :P
Let me know if it works for you ! :)
--- End quote ---
NOW you tell me! ;D
So I am assuming I can just clamp the alligator clips right to the leads of the 5v entry cap to get my voltage for measurements? Same for 12v stuff, etc?
--- End quote ---
RTFM
:laugh: :laugh: :laugh:
The alligators are just for powering the Oszifox. It needs between 9V and 13V DC, so I connected it to a +12V test point (RED alligator) and a GND test point (BLACK alligator) on the Centipede PCB. A cap that has the same voltage is OK as well of course.
Connect the tiny white wire with clamp to Ground (0 Volt) on the bottom side of the Oszifox. Then hook this to a known (test) GND point on the PCB. You could extend this wire, but there really should always be a GND point somewhere around where you're measuring.
Then touch the point you want to measure with the metal tip of the Oszifox. You can select settings with the buttons on top. You can center the line by sliding the AC/DC switch to GROUND.
Was there a floppy or any software included ? If so could you post it ?
That seller owes me a couple of bucks !
Using it with a laptop makes reading the signals a lot easier, but you still get enough clue's from the tiny display for basic measurements (like "do I have a clocksignal or is it missing". If you want to know if the clock is the correct frequency/amplitude, you'll need the pc/laptop.
shardian:
What F'ing manual? ;D
Yes, power for the scope is what I was meaning. :P
Just wanting to clarify if the scope itsself needed ~12volts regardless of what is being measured. System 1 uses +5 and -12, so I'll just grab +12 from the pc power supply. I like those little probe wires. Odds are I'll just set the probe to the side and use those.
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