So, my attenuator is basically a 50k potentiometer and 3 caps at present. It seems to work.
It is a 100uf electrolytic in series with input and output to couple the signal, and a 100pf cap between the output of the potentiometer and ground.
I guess I have no idea how to calculate the impedance, the bandpass, and to understand why it seems to add noise. It's definitely true, I have a lot of wires everywhere, so there will be plenty of noise picked up by the wires. There is no shielding anywhere, and I am in a noisy environment.
I would like to tune it to operate best from audio range to 1.6mhz , and this is because I am able to make this signal with the signal generator I plan to use with it. The most use will be audio range, but I may use it above 1mhz also, idk, if for nothing else than to see it work.
edit:;;; basically, it looks like if I increase the size of the capacitor, I can lower the frequency of the lopass filter, so when I put too much attenuation, the resistance that applies to the low pass filter drops too much, and the cutoff frequency of the lopass filter goes way up, allowing lots of high frequency noise onto the line. I wonder if my best approach is to use female pins to let me just change the capacitor by inserting one into the pins.
It is a 100uf electrolytic in series with input and output to couple the signal, and a 100pf cap between the output of the potentiometer and ground.
I guess I have no idea how to calculate the impedance, the bandpass, and to understand why it seems to add noise. It's definitely true, I have a lot of wires everywhere, so there will be plenty of noise picked up by the wires. There is no shielding anywhere, and I am in a noisy environment.
I would like to tune it to operate best from audio range to 1.6mhz , and this is because I am able to make this signal with the signal generator I plan to use with it. The most use will be audio range, but I may use it above 1mhz also, idk, if for nothing else than to see it work.

edit:;;; basically, it looks like if I increase the size of the capacitor, I can lower the frequency of the lopass filter, so when I put too much attenuation, the resistance that applies to the low pass filter drops too much, and the cutoff frequency of the lopass filter goes way up, allowing lots of high frequency noise onto the line. I wonder if my best approach is to use female pins to let me just change the capacitor by inserting one into the pins.
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