The story starts during some tests on an Armega16 with an Arduino bootloader.
I wanted generate a clock output for others devices, so I made a simple sketch to generate it using Timer2 (see attached file Atmega16_test_1.ino) and output a 4MHz clock.
Well, I decided to see that clock with my scope:

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(continued on next post)
So the Atmega16 was enough fast to do that, and the standard 10:1 passive probe was the worst thing to use for “fast” digital signals measurement…
So I did an other measure using a more short ground wire to see any improvement:

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The only way is to use an active probe. A current active probe costs from about 1.500$ plus a new scope that supports it (> 3000$)….. a little bit expensive….
So after some research a found that it was possible to buy on ebay an 80’s active probe like the Tektronix P6202.
In particular the P6202 is a 500Mhz fet active probe with a provided power supply and can be used with any scope (note that the P6202A doesn’t have the power supply because it was made for Tektronix scopes that can power it).
So I bought one from ebay for about 100€:

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http://www.dfad.com.au/links/THE%20SECR … 0OCt09.pdf
… but it is well worth reading.
With low L resistor and good 50ohm cable it works flat till 2GHz usually.
I doubt you will get better results with an active 500MHz probe for that specific purpose..
PS: When building the 1k probe – mind the most “o’scope probe cables” are not 50ohm, their inner wire is a “resistor” (around 200ohm).
Messing with above “1k’ probe and atmega (simulations, pictures, results):
http://forum.arduino.cc/index.php?topic=220942.0
Pito wrote:
PS: When building the 1k probe – mind the most “o’scope probe cables” are not 50ohm, their inner wire is a “resistor” (around 200ohm).
PS: BTW: an other earthquake this early morning… this thing is becoming a little bit nasty this year…
Africa is pushing itself hard to Europe’s kitchen..
PS: BTW: an other earthquake this early morning… this thing is becoming a little bit nasty this year…
Africa is pushing itself hard to Europe’s kitchen..
The Alps were ~8-10km tall few mil. years back (as the Africa pushed it up), the most countryside around Alps (ie Bavaria, Austria, Italy, Swiss) is made of material eroded from the Alps heights, somewhere 2-3km deep layer. First the Gibraltar will close itself, Mediterranean Sea evaporates (as it was a desert only few million years ago)..

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