P410: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
==Links== | ==Links== | ||
* [http://www.freepatentsonline.com/2883619.html US Patent 2883619, ''Electrical Probe'']. [[John Kobbe]] and [[Bill Polits]]. Filed February 1956. ([http://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/pdfs/US2883619.pdf PDF]) | * [http://www.freepatentsonline.com/2883619.html US Patent 2883619, ''Electrical Probe'']. [[John Kobbe]] and [[Bill Polits]]. Filed February 1956. ([http://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/pdfs/US2883619.pdf PDF]) | ||
{{MissingPics}} | |||
[[Category:1 MΩ Oscilloscope probes]] | [[Category:1 MΩ Oscilloscope probes]] | ||
[[Category:Introduced in 1955]] | [[Category:Introduced in 1955]] |
Revision as of 05:55, 18 August 2021
The Tektronix P410 is a 10× passive voltage probe. Maximum voltage is 600 V peak-to-peak. It connects to the scope with a UHF connector.
The "P400 Series" (not to be confused with the modern P400 probe) also includes P405 (5x), P420 (20x), P450 (50x), P450-L (50x extra low capacitance), and P4100 (100x).
These probes were introduced in 1955 along with the Type 541 and Type 545 scopes because at 30 MHz, the P510A's 50 Ω coax cable exhibited unacceptable ringing due to the impedance mismatch at the scope's 1 MΩ input.
The P400 uses a special cable with a very thin, high-resistance center conductor which creates a better impedance match. All subsequent high-impedance probes use this kind of cable.
Links
- US Patent 2883619, Electrical Probe. John Kobbe and Bill Polits. Filed February 1956. (PDF)
Pictures
- please add