Model 546A Page 13Wire-AND NodeOne of the most difficult problems encountered in troubleshooting integrated circuits is a stuck wire-AND node. Typically, one of the open-collector gates may still continue sinking current after it hasbeen turned off. The Logic Pulser and Current Tracer provides an easy method of identifying the faultgate.Referring to Figure 7 place the Current Tracer on the gate side of the pull-up resistor. Align the markon the probe tip along the length of the printed-circuit trace and adjust the probe's sensitivity controluntil the indicator is just fully lighted. If the indicator will not light - use a logic Pulser programmedto the 100 Hz continuous mode to excite the line. Place the tracer tip on the output pin of each gate;only the faulty gate will cause the indicator to light.Gate-to-Gate FaultsWhen a low-impedance fault exists between two gates, the Current Tracer and logic Pulser combineto quickly pinpoint the defect. In Figure 8 gate A's output is shorted to ground. Place the pulse mid-way between the two gates and place the Current Tracer's tip on the Pulser's pin. Pulse the line in the100 Hz continuous mode and adjust the Current Tracer's sensitivity control until the indicator justlights. First place the Current Tracer tip next to gate A and then gate B while continuing to excite thetrace. The tracer will light only on the gate A side, since gate A, (the defect in this example), is sink-ing the majority of the current.