Electronic – Quick safety question probing 120VAC

oscilloscopesafety

I did read several questions about safely probing high AC voltages with an oscilloscope. I had been taught to isolate the scope, which I see now is dangerous. So I think what I should do is then use an isolation transformer between the DUT and the 120VAC wall outlet. My question is then if I want to measure say just the AC voltage waveform can I just connect my ground clip to the isolated neutral and my probe tip to the isolated line? Assuming both probe and scope input can take the voltage?

Or do I need another transformer between isolated neutral and line and the scope?

Best Answer

Use a quality, high impedance, differential probe if your scope doesn't have the capabilities of differential inputs. This is an external device that provides isolation, typically up to 500 or 1000 VDC, and yet delivers a low level (.01 or .001) representation of the input signal.

If you scope does have the capability of differential inputs, Select "A + B", and use those two input channels to measure your signal. Note that you do NOT use common and the probe tip, but only the two probe tips.

Dealing with HV as I do, I much prefer just using the differential isolator for safety sake... It prevents even accidentally touching the (typically) grounded ring at the end of the probe to a live circuit, letting out the magic smoke.