I am facing a problem for peak to peak measurement. I have an oscilloscope 2406B and using with Picoscope v6.13.6 on Windows 10. when I added a peak to peak measurement for signal measurement, it shows me double value of it. I have attachted a screenshot of it. It shows a right on the display, but wrong on measurement dialoge box. In the following screenshot I have set 1 Vpp and below you can see, it shows me 2.155 Vpp. probe is also on 1X. Is there any setting problem in software or what could be a possible cause of this ?
Please guide me to overcome it. Thank you
I think you have misunderstood. Here I sent you the pictures of the function generator settings (set 1 Vpp)and the signal is given to other Oscilloscope and you can see it appears as ~1 Vpp. But why it appears 2 Vpp on picoscope ???
Please looking for some solution.
This is because the function generator expects a load at the output (most times 600 ohm)
The internal resistor of the generator is also 600 ohm in this case.
Because you don't have a 600 ohm resistor at the output you don't have the voltage drop of the internal resistor. So with unloaded generator you get 2V top top ant with the 600 ohm you get 1V top top.
Thanks for reply. I have attachted that files but it doesn't posted, I don't know why.
Anyways, as you said about the voltage divider that make sense. But in this case internal resistance of generator is 50 Ohm but that make no difference becuase it will be divide by factor 2 (becuase of same output impedance and voltage divider rule) so it shows the half of generated voltage. as in the normal Oscilloscope,there is a setting to set 50 ohm oscilloscope resistance so that same voltage appearance on oscillosope. But in picoscope software, Is there any kind of setting to change its internal resistance while measurement so that it shows the same Vpp??
That makes sense now, I though you were using our generator, so the voltage you see on our scope is 2V because the input impedance of our scope is 1 MOhm, whereas the signal generator will drive it's output so that you have 1V into a 50 Ohm terminated input.
You can either use a feed through 50 Ohm terminator on the scope, or you can create a Maths channel that performs the calculation to take account of the 1 MOhm input..