Distributed deflection plates: Difference between revisions

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==Reality==
==Reality==
A real deflection plate structure is slightly limited by the fact that the last deflection plates may be longer and more widely separated than the others.  Furthermore, the characteristic impedance of the deflection plate structure may not be identical to that of the leads going into and out of the CRT.  These are usually high impedance lines and difficult to make.
A real deflection plate structure is slightly limited by the fact that the last deflection plates may be longer and more widely separated than the others.  Furthermore, the characteristic impedance of the deflection plate structure may not be identical to that of the leads going into and out of the CRT.  These are usually high impedance lines and difficult to make.
As a generalization, oscilloscopes with 100MHz or less bandwidth do not have a distributed deflection structure.  (The 580 series with a distributed deflection structure and a 100MHz bandwidth is an exception).
   
   
[[File:Tek7844-v-b2.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Vertical termination resistor (l) and amplifier (r) in a [[7844]]]]
[[File:Tek7844-v-b2.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Vertical termination resistor (l) and amplifier (r) in a [[7844]]]]

Revision as of 18:43, 11 December 2023

Distributed vertical deflection plates and delay lines in a T581 CRT (beam direction left to right)
Simplified schematic of distributed deflection structure

In CRTs, a trade/off exists between writing rate, deflection sensitivity and spot size. Within a given technology (e.g. mono acceleration, post deflection acceleration or microchannel plate (MCP)), these three characteristics can be traded off against each other. Improve one and the others suffer. Improve the technology and all three can be improved simultaneously. Writing rate is important to observe single short-lived events, but is not important for repetitive signals. Spot size is important in showing detail in the waveform. Sensitivity is important mostly to permit greater bandwidth in vertical amplifiers.

Meshes that shield the deflection plates from the strength of post electron acceleration field and electron lenses both trade off sensitivity against spot size to varying degrees. They do, however, contribute net performance improvements.

All CRTs have a finite frequency response but distributed deflection plates extend the CRT's bandwidth as well as aid the vertical amplifier by virtually eliminating the capacitive load on the vertical amplifier.

Even the CRT with a single pair of deflection plates has frequency response not as simple as an RLC circuit. A voltage step applied to a single pair of deflection plates simultaneously affects all the electrons between the plates. Those that are just exiting the plates see nothing as they continue on their way to the phosphor for display. Those that are at the entrance to the plates feel the effects of all voltage changes that take place during their transit through the plates. Therefore they bear the memory of any deflection plate voltage changes during their journey through the plates. The effects of any deflection plate voltage changes are delayed in proportion to their distance from the exit simply because it takes time for the electrons to travel to exit of the plates. This is what makes the frequency response so complicated.

For example, if it takes 1 ns for an electron to travel the length of the plates (usually one on each side of the electron beam) and a 1 GHz sine wave is applied between the plates, the full 360 degrees of the sine wave causes the electron to move up and down during transit. By the time the electron exits the plate area 1 ns later, the electron is back where it started from. There is no net deflection and the sensitivity is zero at this frequency.

Making the transit time shorter by shortening up the deflection plate improves the bandwidth, but reduces the deflection sensitivity by the same factor. Using a distributed deflection plate structure is a way around this, extending the bandwidth without reducing the deflection sensitivity. The only trade off is in complexity and therefore cost.

In the distributed deflection plate structure, the original deflection plates are cut up into individual segments. The capacitance of the deflection plates can then be made part of a lumped delay line by adding inductance between each of the plate segments. These inductors are actually inside the CRT.

Signals in any lumped delay line travel relatively slowly. If done correctly, the electron beam velocity can equal the signal velocity down the lumped delay line. The signal and electrons travel together. This reduces the time the electron beam spends between any particular deflection plate pair by the number of plates. So the electrons keep seeing the same voltage no matter where they are along the structure.

The lumped delay line is terminated at the end of the deflection structure outside the CRT. The end of this delay line needs to be terminated to prevent the drive signal being reflected back through the line. In Tektronix scopes, the termination resistor can often be seen attached to a second pair of vertical deflection terminals on the side of the CRT, which bring out the end of the transmission line. This means the vertical amplifier is driving a resistive load and not the capacitance of a long deflection plate. In some scopes, even the output impedance of the vertical amplifier is equal to the CRT characteristic impedance. While this is not essential, it does reduce incidental reflections.

Note that the last deflection plates are often tilted and farther apart than the others. This is to prevent the deflection plates from intercepting and cutting off the electron beam at large deflections. The famous 545A's CRT, which does not have a distributed deflection plate, has only 4 divisions of deflection because of vertical deflection plate interception.

The higher the required bandwidth of the CRT, the more likely the distributed deflection plate structure will physically look like a uniform transmission line than separate plates connected by wires.

Reality

A real deflection plate structure is slightly limited by the fact that the last deflection plates may be longer and more widely separated than the others. Furthermore, the characteristic impedance of the deflection plate structure may not be identical to that of the leads going into and out of the CRT. These are usually high impedance lines and difficult to make.

As a generalization, oscilloscopes with 100MHz or less bandwidth do not have a distributed deflection structure. (The 580 series with a distributed deflection structure and a 100MHz bandwidth is an exception).

Vertical termination resistor (l) and amplifier (r) in a 7844


History

Distributed deflection plates were introduced in the 580-series scopes in the late 1950s. Transistorized scopes followed with the upgrade of the 50 MHz 453 to the 150 MHz model 454 in 1967.

Typically, only the vertical deflection plates are distributed. An exception is the 7104 due to the high horizontal system bandwidth required (350 MHz).

Use of Distributed Deflection Plates
Model Distributed Y plates Distributed X plates
11301 yes no
11302 yes no
2445 yes no
2465 yes no
2467 yes no
453 no no
454 yes no
465 no no
475 yes no
485 yes no
519 yes no
53x no no
54x no no
55x no no
56x no no
58x yes no
7403 no no
7503 no no
7504 no no
7603 no no
7612D no no
7704 yes no
7704A yes no
7844 yes no
7854 yes no
7903 yes no
7904 yes no
7904A yes no
7912 yes no
7103 yes yes
7104 yes yes
7250 yes yes
SCD1000 yes yes
SCD5000 yes yes

Literature