Fluke PM6690 Service Manual page 85

Timer/counter/analyzer
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must be replaced if the normal control voltage range cannot
make the oscillator output 10.000000 MHz.
As a last resort to exclude external causes of malfunction,
desolder the oven oscillator from the main circuit board.
Place it upside down and connect +12 V and ground accord-
ing to Figure 6-68. A cold oven oscillator draws approxi-
mately 0.30 - 0.35 A. During heating the current consumption
varies. After 10 minutes it should stabilize on less than 0.1 A.
The output V
should be approximately +5 V and the 10
ref
MHz sinewave output signal should have an amplitude of
more than 2.5 V
measured with a 1 MW, 10x probe. The
pp
control input has an internal bias to keep the output frequency
in the middle of the range. Adjust the control voltage between
0 V and +5 V and check the output frequency range with a fre-
quency counter. The minimum trimming range should be
±5 Hz. 10.000000 MHz must be reached somewhere between
0 V and +5 V.
If the oven oscillator circuitry is repaired, a new calibration
must be performed. See Chapter 7. A new factory calibration
by means of the utility program should also be performed.
External Reference Input
See Figure 6-67 and Figure 6-70.
The input signal is amplified in U31. The output signal from
the amplifier should be a square wave with logic levels, repro-
ducing the timing characteristics of the input signal. Check
the signal at U32:11. U32 generates a short pulse (approxi-
mately 40 ns) for each input cycle, check at U32:9. These
pulses generate a broad spectrum of harmonics, and the
following high-Q 10 MHz crystal filter allows only a 10 MHz
sinewave to pass. Measure at X19. Note that the trimmer
C442 is used for maximizing the amplitude at X19. Check that
the amplitude is not less than 1 V
selected, the gate U33 stops the 10 MHz signal. The control
signal on U33:1 is then low.
. If external reference is not
pp
100 MHz Multiplier
See Figure 6-67 and Figure 6-69.
100 MHz is used in the measuring logic, mainly as a reference
clock, but also for other purposes. A PLL is used for multi-
plying the 10 MHz reference to 100 MHz. On power-up the
processor sets up the PLL IC (U9) via the SPI bus. An output
signal, PLL LOCK, tells the processor if the loop is locked
(high level). A VCO, consisting of an inverter (U47) and an
LC circuit in the feedback loop, is controlled by the PLL IC.
The DC voltage from U9:2 is filtered and controls a capaci-
tance diode. The VCO frequency changes with the capaci-
tance. The loop can handle the switching of 10 MHz refer-
ence, from internal to external and vice versa. There is no
need for a new setup. If external reference is selected and no
such signal is connected to the instrument, the PLL will be un-
U4
mP
OSC
U41, Q53, Q54
10 MHz
INT REF
OUT
ON/OFF
EXT REF
IN
U31, U32,
U33, Q55
U9, U47,
U48
Figure 6-67
Timebase reference system.
+12 V
3
Vref
2
Vcontrol
1
Figure 6-68
Oven oscillator pinning (seen from bottom side).
mP/SPI
U4-
U7
OVEN
STD
OSC
ON/OFF
FPGA
100 MHz
U11
PLL
100 MHz
LOCK
PLL
(to mP)
mP/SPI
10 MHz
4
OUT
5
GND
Troubleshooting 6-41

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