stop feeding the troll and it will go away.only reason kirakos is not on ignore here is because i am a moderator charged with enforcement of forum rules.
What is your F*cking problem? it is about history as the title is indicated "A history of oscilloscope development in Vilnius". The troll must be hungry again.
Re: A history of oscilloscope development in Vilnius
As I see it, it is your own time you are wasting, just bugger off and leave us alone.
Perhaps you would be better off telling yourself how good you are on your own forum.
Oh! I see you already do that! Good Idea that having a forum with members by invitation only. Presumably you have to be
a) Greek
b) Extremely well off
c) Agree with everything the forum owner says.
Oh and most importantly worship the ground you stand on.
Re: A history of oscilloscope development in Vilnius
Mr. Kiriakos, it is not your duty to enforce the rules of this forum. Leave it to the administrator and moderators. If this document is deemed irrelevant by them, they will close or delete the topic. Else, it can stay.
Everybody, please keep it civil.
Originally posted by PeteS in CA
Remember that by the time consequences of a short-sighted decision are experienced, the idiot who made the bad decision may have already been promoted or moved on to a better job at another company.
Re: A history of oscilloscope development in Vilnius
Cool read. I have several older scopes A Tek 453, Tek 468 and a Tek 2213A. I use them all. All I work on is vintage audio stuff so those are all I will ever need.
Re: A history of oscilloscope development in Vilnius
In my side of the pond, older scopes of Hameg are still dominant ones for vintage audio.
But about getting spare parts for them gets harder and harder those days.
The modern scopes in 2013 - 2014 are so much better, and they do worth the investment.
I can see the waveform and eight measurements (of parameters) instantly.
This is remarkable, so much data on screen and totally effortless.
Re: A history of oscilloscope development in Vilnius
Aside from Tek & HP most older scopes are fairly easy to repair as they are build from standard parts. The hardest parts are obsolete transistors and the odd obscure IC. My old Gould OS300 used mostly discrete logic that was still available; the analog frontend would be the hardest part to source for.
Please do not PM me with questions! Questions via PM will not be answered. Post on the forums instead!
For service manual, schematic, boardview (board view), datasheet, cad - use our search.
Aside from Tek & HP most older scopes are fairly easy to repair as they are build from standard parts. The hardest parts are obsolete transistors and the odd obscure IC. My old Gould OS300 used mostly discrete logic that was still available; the analog frontend would be the hardest part to source for.
As for Tek, some were worse than others for those hybrids. I specifically went with a used 2225 (a few years ago) where that would be less of a problem. Sure, lower BW, but more durable. Not a mainframe scope, but anyone remotely careful isn't going to damage even this one, which is actually quite decent for a "cheap Tek," as some considered them back in the day.
"pokemon go... to hell!"
EOL it...
Originally posted by shango066
All style and no substance.
Originally posted by smashstuff30
guilty,guilty,guilty,guilty! guilty of being cheap-made!
Re: A history of oscilloscope development in Vilnius
As I get back into the hobby of service repair after many years away from it I realise it's time to build up some basic test equipment again. For example, I'm currently fault finding an electric piano and need to look at the digital bus signals. In the 'old days' I'd reach for an oscilloscope I would have borrowed from work. I don't have that luxury now. So I was exploring these adaptors that turn your laptop into an oscilloscope. Are they any good? Remember, I'm not looking to repair rocket ships - just fault finding at relatively low frequencies. Any thoughts and opinions I'd be very interested to hear.
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