Hey all,
I have a DTE/DCE board which takes a TTL signal from one end and translates it to a RS-232 signal (-15/+15 out of phase signal). These boards are already made, I'm just testing them to make sure they are still functional.
I have a Tektronix osciliscope monitoring the TTL signal on channel 1 and the RS-232 signal monitored on channel 2.
Typically I just touch coinciding pins and see if I have the appropriate voltages, but a couple of the boards behave funny. When I apply the TTL input to the input pin the voltage drops drastically (about a volt, maybe less). but when I take it off the input it returns to normal (I also get no RS-232 signal out).
So I have checked visually, looking for shorted out traces and such but find none.
I have noticed though that whoever built this board has bad soldering practices. There are quite a number of those blobbed on cold solder joints.
I guess my question would be could cold solder joints with contaminants inside attenuate a signal like that? My first assumption was that There was a short to ground since I was losing the signal the second it touched the input pin, is that a safe assumption?
-Thanks guys!
I have a DTE/DCE board which takes a TTL signal from one end and translates it to a RS-232 signal (-15/+15 out of phase signal). These boards are already made, I'm just testing them to make sure they are still functional.
I have a Tektronix osciliscope monitoring the TTL signal on channel 1 and the RS-232 signal monitored on channel 2.
Typically I just touch coinciding pins and see if I have the appropriate voltages, but a couple of the boards behave funny. When I apply the TTL input to the input pin the voltage drops drastically (about a volt, maybe less). but when I take it off the input it returns to normal (I also get no RS-232 signal out).
So I have checked visually, looking for shorted out traces and such but find none.
I have noticed though that whoever built this board has bad soldering practices. There are quite a number of those blobbed on cold solder joints.
I guess my question would be could cold solder joints with contaminants inside attenuate a signal like that? My first assumption was that There was a short to ground since I was losing the signal the second it touched the input pin, is that a safe assumption?
-Thanks guys!