Function generators are fundamental instruments used in electronic design, system testing, troubleshooting, calibration labs, and automated test equipment (ATE). They generate precise waveforms—sine, square, triangle, pulse, or arbitrary signals—that serve as reference inputs for circuits and devices under test. Because downstream accuracy depends entirely on the stability of these signals, function generator drift poses significant risks.
Over time, aging components, environmental fluctuations, and internal electronic changes cause frequency, amplitude, and distortion characteristics to drift. SIMCO provides accredited calibration services that detect and correct this drift, ensuring waveform integrity and measurement reliability across regulated industries.
Understanding What Causes Function Generator Drift
A function generator’s accuracy is determined by several interconnected components. Drift can occur due to:
1. Oscillator Aging
Most function generators rely on quartz crystal oscillators or temperature-compensated oscillators (TCXOs). As crystals age, their resonant frequency slowly changes. This is one of the most common sources of frequency drift.
2. Temperature Sensitivity
Even temperature-controlled oscillators experience some drift if ambient conditions vary widely. Temperature changes affect:
- Oscillator frequency
- Amplitude stability
- Harmonic distortion characteristics
Inconsistent temperature conditions accelerate drift.
3. Component Degradation
Capacitors, resistors, and semiconductors degrade with time, altering:
- Waveform purity
- Rise/fall times
- Frequency accuracy
- DC offset performance
These component-level shifts accumulate into significant deviations.
4. Power Supply Instability
Unstable power rails cause waveform distortion and amplitude drift. Regulated industries often calibrate power supplies alongside function generators to maintain test-system integrity.
5. Mechanical or Electrical Shock
Impacts or electrical overstress events can permanently alter internal circuitry.
Why Function Generator Calibration Is Essential
Calibration ensures that every signal produced by the function generator reflects the intended value within tolerances. SIMCO’s calibration process verifies:
Frequency Accuracy
Even minor deviations can produce incorrect test results, especially in RF, timing, or synchronization circuits.
Amplitude Accuracy
Incorrect amplitude affects gain, biasing, and power calculations within the test device.
Waveform Linearity and Distortion
High distortion compromises sensitive analog circuits and can mask or mimic faults during testing.
Offset Voltage Accuracy
Drifted offsets introduce baseline errors in mixed-signal circuits.
Trigger and Timing Integrity
Automated test systems depend on stable timing parameters; drift introduces false triggers or missed events.
SIMCO evaluates all these parameters using calibrated reference equipment with full traceability to national metrology standards.
Organizations calibrating bench equipment often pair function generator calibration with SIMCO’s accredited digital multimeter calibration, which ensures accurate measurement of amplitude, frequency, and DC offsets.
Power source stability is also essential; SIMCO maintains this with certified power supply calibration, preventing drift that would otherwise propagate through test systems.
Consequences of Uncalibrated Function Generators
1. Incorrect Pass/Fail Decisions
Test systems dependent on function generator outputs produce unreliable results, leading to incorrect acceptance or rejection of products.
2. Erroneous Debugging and Troubleshooting
Engineers may misdiagnose circuit behavior if reference waveforms are inaccurate.
3. Calibration Failure in Downstream Instruments
Oscilloscopes, multimeters, and other measurement tools rely on correct external signals for verification.
4. Reduced Product Quality and Reliability
Subtle waveform inaccuracies can cause long-term reliability issues in sensitive electronics.
5. Regulatory Noncompliance
Calibration drift undermines measurement validity, resulting in audit findings and loss of traceability.
How to Maintain Function Generator Accuracy Between Calibrations
Store in stable environmental conditions
Temperature and humidity stability reduce component drift.
Avoid operating near maximum output limits
High load or maximum amplitude settings accelerate internal wear.
Allow adequate warm-up time
Oscillator-based instruments require thermal stabilization before use.
Use high-quality loads and cabling
Poor connections introduce reflections and distortions.
Recalibrate after electrical overstress events
Suspected power surges or overloads warrant immediate removal from service.
SIMCO works with clients to define calibration intervals based on usage patterns, environmental conditions, and risk classification.
Conclusion
Function generator drift affects frequency accuracy, amplitude stability, waveform purity, and overall test-system performance. Calibration is essential to ensure these signals remain accurate, repeatable, and traceable. SIMCO provides accredited, technically rigorous calibration services that maintain waveform integrity and support the stringent requirements of regulated industries. With proper calibration, organizations can trust their test systems, protect product quality, and maintain dependable performance across all electronic applications.
