Trying to measure noise With Siglent scope

I have a FY6900 signalgenerator,and if I set it to 2v out the Siglent SDS1202x reds 2,16v.If I messaures the signal with the DMM i get 0,700 vRMS =1,974v P-P,Is it safe to say thet the scope messaures to much then?
Depends on how the scope 'measures'. Do you do a measurement using the cursors, or does the scope calculate it internally?

Jan
 
Our Tek scopes at work have an internal calibration routine you're supposed to run periodically. The official interval seems to be never, so I try to do this whenever I use one. I think it reduces offsets and probably tweaks some other stuff. You want the scope well warmed up before doing this.

Same with the Siglent in question. It's called "self cal" and lasts a few minutes but the scope has to be warmed up indeed. room temperature is also important. However, you still get some errors in measuring exact voltages.
 
I am trying out the measurement amp.I am trying it on 4 regulators,heres the regulators from best to worst.

PSUS.png

And the winner is :

Ebay shunt.jpg

A cheap ebay shunt regulator...

The result:
LM317/3337 reg :0,00024v
Ebay reg 2 with leds:0,00006v
Quanghau shunt: 0,00003v
Ebay shunt Winner :0,000004V
Hope I got it all right.
I calibrated the amp to my scope so it is to be taken with a grain of salt,but at least I can se the noise of the PSU´s.
 
I am trying out the measurement amp.I am trying it on 4 regulators,heres the regulators from best to worst.

View attachment 1058265
And the winner is :

View attachment 1058266
A cheap ebay shunt regulator...

The result:
LM317/3337 reg :0,00024v
Ebay reg 2 with leds:0,00006v
Quanghau shunt: 0,00003v
Ebay shunt Winner :0,000004V
Hope I got it all right.
I calibrated the amp to my scope so it is to be taken with a grain of salt,but at least I can se the noise of the PSU´s.
Assuming this is a broadband measurement, what was the measurement bandwidth?

Jan
 
A couple of points on measuring noise gleaned from doing it for customers for 30 years:

1. Start with proper scope probe technique which means not using the ground clip lead ever, like this.

2. If you want to measure the output noise of a really low noise regulator, the sadly departed Jim Williams showed the way with App Note 83. After his death Todd Owen picked up the ball and App Note 159 has a somewhat improved circuit with 80 dB of gain and 150 nV RMS noise floor. The circuit in Figure 2 is a real challenge to build. Start with a nice big tin of cookies.

3. A simple way to determine if a noise waveform is due to the AC mains is to use line triggering on the scope. The part of the waveform that stands still is due to the mains, the part that moves isn't.