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A good oscilloscope is too expensive equipment for a conventional radio amateur, for which soldering chips and repairing electronics is just a hobby. If it is necessary to monitor electrical signals without obtaining extremely accurate results, it is quite possible to do with a home-made device. Such an oscilloscope connects to the screen of a smartphone and works under the control of a special free application. Its manufacture will cost inexpensively and take only a couple of hours, taking into account the collection of materials.
A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

Materials:


  • 3.5 mm plug from the headphones;
  • wires
  • heat shrink;
  • Zener diode 2.2V;
  • 2.2K resistor;
  • 1K resistor;
  • test clip;
  • case from marker;
  • furniture carnation.

Oscilloscope assembly


The figure shows a diagram of a simple oscilloscope - a probe for a smartphone, which must be repeated. It is very important to use resistors with the same color coding as in the example, since this will allow you to get the maximum sensitivity and accuracy from the device.
A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

Assembly should begin with the preparation of a 3.5 mm mini-jack plug from the headphones. The plastic part is cut off from it, after which 2 wires are soldered as shown in the oscilloscope circuit.
A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

Soldered wires must be further secured and insulated. To do this, it is enough to apply 2 layers of heat shrink tube.
A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

Next to the head of a small furniture stud, you need to solder a single-wire wire.
A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

The soldering point is insulated by heat shrinkage. The carnation will perform the function of a positive electrode.
A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

A wire with a stud is inserted into the body of the marker with the rod removed. As a result, the electrode should replace the writing tip of the marker. You also need to insert the wiring from the 3.5 mm connector into the punched hole in the back cap of the marker.
A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

Next, you need to connect in parallel and solder the zener diode with a 1K resistor. According to the device diagram, a 2.2K resistor is soldered to them.
A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

A side hole is made in the marker body closer to the writing part. A separate wire is threaded into it, the second end of which comes out from the back of the felt-tip pen.
A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

A zener diode with a 1K resistor is soldered to the output wiring. Also, they need to connect the power core from the 3.5 mm jack. It is important to observe the polarity, as in the diagram. The second core from the mini-jack is soldered to the 2.2K resistor.
A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

A wire with a stud must be connected to the remaining end of the 2.2K resistor. All connections are protected by heat shrink. After that, the resistors and the zener diode must be hidden in the marker body, closing it with the rear cap.
A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

A wire attached to the side of the marker connected to the 1K resistor and the zener diode needs to be soldered to the test clip.
A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

After that, the hardware of the device is completely ready.
A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

Next, you need to install the Oscilloscope Pro 2 application on your smartphone. The oscilloscope connects to the phone and can be used for its intended purpose under the control of this program. Its test clip is used as mass, and the clove electrode on the marker is a plus. The application in conjunction with a home-made device allows you to configure thresholds, view the waveform on the display and much more.
A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

A simple homemade oscilloscope from a smartphone

Watch the video


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Comments (9)
  1. Michael S.
    #1 Michael S. Guests June 18, 2019 2:02 p.m.
    12
    Everything would be fine, but low sensitivity and a narrow frequency range negate all the charms.
    In general, you will get a nice toy, unsuitable for practical use.
  2. Dmitry
    #2 Dmitry Guests June 22, 2019 12:37
    0
    Where are the characteristics of this miracle? Maximum voltage, frequency, etc.? Without this, one can’t understand whether such a craft is worth undertaking.
    1. Guest Anonymous
      #3 Guest Anonymous Guests August 2, 2019 12:20
      0
      If you carefully read, then everything is clear - the voltage is 2.2 V, the frequency is 22 kHz.
  3. Ivanovich
    #4 Ivanovich Guests June 22, 2019 4:35 p.m.
    0
    And the program is different!
  4. Andreus
    #5 Andreus Guests June 24, 2019 8:29 p.m.
    1
    The program on the video is completely different and apparently paid.
    The one indicated in the video is full G.
    The author is unsuccessful.
    1. Well
      #6 Well Guests 25 June 2019 07:02 AM
      1
      This may be. But there are dozens of such programs, and many free ones, I recently made such an oscilloscope, Low-frequency, of course, but for my needs it’s the most!
      1. critic
        #7 critic Guests August 7, 2019 11:08
        0
        and what you wanted no matter how as an audio input
  5. Guest Michael
    #8 Guest Michael Guests July 2, 2019 12:34
    0
    3 kilo ohms input impedance? Do not tell my hooves ....
  6. critic
    #9 critic Guests August 7, 2019 11:13
    0
    Why is the active end (carnation) soldered to the plug to the ground contact on the probe circuit, and the passive to the microphone contact?

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