Looking for CPU board 54111D (later 2Gs/s version)
Looking to buy a CPU board (later version that supports 2Gs/s option in software). Anyone that can offer a working board at a reasonable price? I want to upgrade my unit with the 54114 test set and my unit's CPU board too old.
Dean
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Re: [TekScopes] Want to use a high-res voltmeter in the Portland Oregon area
Thanks Lars, but that instrument is only specified to 1% accuracy. I need one that's about 10000 times better. And so do you!
Please, send further replies off-list to avoid crossposting. If I hear anything of interest to the lists, I'll forward it.
Dave
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-----Original Message----- From: Lars Ahlstr?m [mailto:lea56@...] Sent: Friday, January 12, 2007 3:16 PM To: David Wise; hp_agilent_equipment@...; TekScopes@... Subject: SV: [TekScopes] Want to use a high-res voltmeter in the Portland Oregon area
Hi Dave,
I could recommend this one. Ebay: 140070877954
I think its just a question of square dollars. ;)
I have the former model, and this one has even BNC out. Its just great, I checked my 8520's with it... allmost just zeroes after the dot... =)
They have a UK website as well: (where you can se their former one)
/Lars
-----Ursprungligt meddelande----- Fr?n: TekScopes@... [mailto:TekScopes@...] F?r David Wise Skickat: den 12 januari 2007 23:09 Till: hp_agilent_equipment@...; TekScopes@... ?mne: [TekScopes] Want to use a high-res voltmeter in the Portland Oregon area
I have a couple of 5-1/2 digit differential voltmeters (Fluke 877A and 895A) in whose calibration I have lost confidence. Since (a) I don't have cubic dollars to spare and (b) it's Just A Hobby, a cal lab is out of the question. Do you know of anyone local to me (Portland Oregon) who has a 6-1/2 digit or better voltmeter that's in good cal? I will also gladly accept suggestions for other places to ask.
No profits are riding on this. I'm doing it just for the heck of it, to satisfy myself that they're in spec.
Thanks, Dave Wise
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Want to use a high-res voltmeter in the Portland Oregon area
I have a couple of 5-1/2 digit differential voltmeters (Fluke 877A and 895A) in whose calibration I have lost confidence. Since (a) I don't have cubic dollars to spare and (b) it's Just A Hobby, a cal lab is out of the question. Do you know of anyone local to me (Portland Oregon) who has a 6-1/2 digit or better voltmeter that's in good cal? I will also gladly accept suggestions for other places to ask.
No profits are riding on this. I'm doing it just for the heck of it, to satisfy myself that they're in spec.
Thanks, Dave Wise
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Due to a programming error [Me], I have lost all emails between 2-30 PM yesterday, and 11-00AM today. Please resend. Sorry about that! Cheers,.................................Don Collie jnr.
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If your friend isn't planning on keeping his 8753A turned on 24/7, he can probably restore the CRT's brightness by using a common CRT restorer/rejuvenator. I have done this with other HP CRT's, and had good success. Another poster has done some life experiments, and found that the restored/rejuvenated HP CRT's have quite a few hours left in them after the procedure is done.
-Chuck Harris
rovmkr wrote:
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Hi Dean, I'm not sure what you are looking for on the 8753A but on behalf of a friend without internet (dont ask)... His HP 8753B has a very faint display, does he need a new CRT? Any one with similar experience? Any one know where to get one? He needs to scan continuous to 6 GHz and is thinking of an 8753D with opt 006. Will this do it or is it in two bands? Anyone know where to get one? Another thought is the 8752C but is the instruction set for these different instruments the same as that of the 8753B? He doesnt want to re-write the software. We need to get hold of a catalog in the mid '90s. Peter. --- In hp_agilent_equipment@..., "tunerwiz" <tunerwiz@...> wrote:
Now that all these CLIP's start to appear, was there ever anything on the 8753A? Dean
Yahoo! Groups Links
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Hi Dean, I'm not sure what you are looking for on the 8753A but on behalf of a friend without internet (dont ask)... His HP 8753B has a very faint display, does he need a new CRT? Any one with similar experience? Any one know where to get one? He needs to scan continuous to 6 GHz and is thinking of an 8753D with opt 006. Will this do it or is it in two bands? Anyone know where to get one? Another thought is the 8752C but is the instruction set for these different instruments the same as that of the 8753B? He doesnt want to re-write the software. We need to get hold of a catalog in the mid '90s. Peter. --- In hp_agilent_equipment@..., "tunerwiz" <tunerwiz@...> wrote: Now that all these CLIP's start to appear, was there ever anything on the 8753A?
Dean
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HP1000 gold plated prototyping board with bus decoders
Hi Chaps,
Have an HP1000 prototyping board, its gold plated and fits in the CPU chassis, has 11 bus decoder logic chips and room for 40+ ICs, in excellent condition :0
Anyone still using these around the traps /
Regards from
Mike Massen Network Power Systems Lab +61 (0) 8 9444 8961 Mb +61 (0) 438 048961 Perth, Western Australia * USA GMC, Opel and Australian VL/VK/VN,VP Commodore Fuse Rail that wont warp or melt ! * RB30 Skyline/Nissan/VL Upgraded ignition driver now in long term economy trials * Twin tyres for most sedans, trikes and motorcycle sidecars * Industrial grade PolyVinyliDeneChloride (PVDC Copolymer) in bulk, the best oxygen and water protective barrier you can find for circuit boards. * Special Equipment for sale: 60KVA 3-phase UPS with large battery cabinet - $12,000 Web site under construction, Ebay and Oztion Auctions
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Re: 1820-0098 decade divider IC for 5321A
--- In hp_agilent_equipment@..., "arthurok" <arthurok@...> wrote: does the unit use a 5 volt power supply? one trick would be to build up a circuit to divide a
crystal osc down to 5 hz i think a 7492 is a divide by 12 counter. 7490 is divide by 10 in ttl More informations on the schematics: The logic power supply is +5V (more exactly 5,1V according to the manual), the logic is TTL (not ECL) but the function of the I/O pins is not totally trivial. The decade divider chip 1820-0098 picks up its 100Hz input with a capacitor coupling just behind the 155V high voltage rectifier. The chip has an input pin and divide by 10 output cascaded to another divide by 10 chip, a reset input, plus a couple of less obvious pins: I named them control input and controlled output. The controlled outputs from the two cascaded dividers are connected together directly and to the Clock input of the counter Main Gate JK flip-flop. The control pins are connected to the gate time selector switch that can ground one or the other divider's control pin. The logic appears to be: grounded control pin => controlled output is active divide by 10 output, else controlled output is high Z. So I guess I could effectively replace this chip with a modern decade divider such as a 7490, a logic OR and an open collector transistor. My main option is still to try to find a spare chip ... -Marc-
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Re: Powering a HP 1141A probe
Mark, Thanks! I am watching the item now! Bob
Mark Kahrs <mark.kahrs@...> wrote: Why bother? Just buy a 1142A supply; one is on epay right now for $9.99.
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On 1/10/07, Robert Hagenbach <rc_hagenbach@...> wrote: Hi,
I bought a HP 1141A RF Differential probe on eBay. It did not come with a power supply. The power connector looks like a 8 pin DIN connector. This would seem to me to indicate that the power supply is more complicated than +/- 12 volts. Can anyone help me with a pin out of the power connector? Should I considered buying a power supply or is it possible to build one?
Bob Hagenbach Largo, Fl
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--- In hp_agilent_equipment@..., "tunerwiz" <tunerwiz@... wrote: > Now that all these CLIP's start to appear, was there ever anything on > the 8753A? I just want to add that I need a schematic for the frac-N digital board. I have a problem on this board that seems to be heat related.
Thanks, Dean I'm also chasing a sporadic problem with my 8753B - it appears to also be in the Frac-N synthesiser board. Maybe a 'sticky' gate. I've been asking around about a CLIP for about a year. Someone did contact me with an offer of a pack for $100, which I'd be quite prepared to pay - particularly at the current UK?-US$ exchange rate(!!) - but I lost his email address in a bout of finger trouble. I've also emailed Mike Kawasaki at Agilent, who has been extraordinarily helpful, but has not been able to assist with the CLIP. My suspicion is that the early 8753 analysers still form a revenue stream for Agilent repair facilities, and that they are (understandably) reluctant to allow the information into the public domain. Cheers Chris GW4DGU
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Re: Powering a HP 1141A probe
Why bother? Just buy a 1142A supply; one is on epay right now for $9.99.
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On 1/10/07, Robert Hagenbach <rc_hagenbach@...> wrote: Hi,
I bought a HP 1141A RF Differential probe on eBay. It did not come with a power supply. The power connector looks like a 8 pin DIN connector. This would seem to me to indicate that the power supply is more complicated than +/- 12 volts. Can anyone help me with a pin out of the power connector? Should I considered buying a power supply or is it possible to build one?
Bob Hagenbach Largo, Fl
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Re: HP 1650A boot diskette
--- In hp_agilent_equipment@..., "va7dij" <va7dij@...> wrote: Can anyone help me get a copy of one of these?
Agilent site, here <; Apro&pageMode=DS&cc=US&lc=eng>
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Re: spectrum analyzer 1st mixer
Hi erik,
Whether you can repair HP mixers at home probably has to do with what you have at home to work with ;-)
I would have to see the mixer in question. It probably requires a microscope, and a wire bonding machine... but maybe not.
I have friends that have put new transistors in HP hybrids from that time frame with a microscope, some silver epoxy, and a steady hand.
-Chuck Harris
erik wrote:
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On Tuesday 09 January 2007 21:30, Chuck Harris wrote: Hello , Thank you for the quick and detailed answer , sounds like that is my problem , I did inject -30dB signal directly in the input port of the mixer , problem is te same, so mixer is blown . I suppose home-repair of a 1st mixer HP style is not feasable ? rgds , Erik
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Re: 1820-0098 decade divider IC for 5321A
does the unit use a 5 volt power supply? one trick would be to build up a circuit to divide a crystal osc down to 5 hz i think a 7492 is a divide by 12 counter. 7490 is divide by 10 in ttl
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----- Original Message ----- From: marc_bury To: hp_agilent_equipment@... Sent: Thursday, January 11, 2007 1:01 AM Subject: [hp_agilent_equipment] 1820-0098 decade divider IC for 5321A
Hello group,
I have an "almost" working HP 5321A counter. It is a small 4 Nixie tubes counter with modest frequency capability, and my problem is that this instrument uses the 60 Hz power source as its reference, but I live in a 50 Hz area...
According to the manual, the 50 Hz option includes changing an IC from a "divide by 6" to a decade counter. Nothing surprising there, but I found that the afore-mentionned decade IC is an HP specific part: 1820-0098. (8 pin TO like metal can) And Google only leads me to the usual sites reserved for professionnal traders. (Sphere does not carry this reference)
So if any good soul in the group has a spare 1820-0098, or a defunct board for an HP counter in this range (there is another decade divider on the board, also 5321A and 5221A are basically the same instrument), I would be glad to arrange a trade. Alternatively a datasheet, or equivalent modern reference would allow me to restore my 5321A to normal counting if not with original parts.
Thank you for reading, Marc
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1820-0098 decade divider IC for 5321A
Hello group,
I have an "almost" working HP 5321A counter. It is a small 4 Nixie tubes counter with modest frequency capability, and my problem is that this instrument uses the 60 Hz power source as its reference, but I live in a 50 Hz area...
According to the manual, the 50 Hz option includes changing an IC from a "divide by 6" to a decade counter. Nothing surprising there, but I found that the afore-mentionned decade IC is an HP specific part: 1820-0098. (8 pin TO like metal can) And Google only leads me to the usual sites reserved for professionnal traders. (Sphere does not carry this reference)
So if any good soul in the group has a spare 1820-0098, or a defunct board for an HP counter in this range (there is another decade divider on the board, also 5321A and 5221A are basically the same instrument), I would be glad to arrange a trade. Alternatively a datasheet, or equivalent modern reference would allow me to restore my 5321A to normal counting if not with original parts.
Thank you for reading, Marc
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Re: 1820-0098 decade divider IC for 5321A
Given the small number of pins, would it be possible to inspect the devices' operation and use either an ECL or 'F; TTL substitute with a small daughter board. Or, as we used to do, solder an SMT part into the air on its legs directly so to speak and drop a blob of epoxy over it...
Whats the upper freq spec btw, havent seen a nixie counter for nigh on 25 years ?!
Regards from
Mike Massen Network Power Systems Lab +61 (0) 8 9444 8961 Mb +61 (0) 438 048961 Perth, Western Australia * USA GMC, Opel and Australian VL/VK Commodore Fuse Rail that wont warp or melt ! * RB30 Skyline/Nissan/VL Upgraded ignition driver now in long term economy trials * Twin tyres for most sedans, trikes and motorcycle sidecars * Industrial grade PolyVinyliDeneChloride (PVDC Copolymer) in bulk, the best oxygen and water protective barrier you can find for circuit boards. * Special Equipment for sale: 60KVA 3
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At 03:01 PM 11/01/07, you wrote: Hello group,
I have an "almost" working HP 5321A counter. It is a small 4 Nixie tubes counter with modest frequency capability, and my problem is that this instrument uses the 60 Hz power source as its reference, but I live in a 50 Hz area...
According to the manual, the 50 Hz option includes changing an IC from a "divide by 6" to a decade counter. Nothing surprising there, but I found that the afore-mentionned decade IC is an HP specific part: 1820-0098. (8 pin TO like metal can) And Google only leads me to the usual sites reserved for professionnal traders. (Sphere does not carry this reference)
So if any good soul in the group has a spare 1820-0098, or a defunct board for an HP counter in this range (there is another decade divider on the board, also 5321A and 5221A are basically the same instrument), I would be glad to arrange a trade. Alternatively a datasheet, or equivalent modern reference would allow me to restore my 5321A to normal counting if not with original parts.
Thank you for reading, Marc
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--- In hp_agilent_equipment@..., "rfiemiguy" <rhyolite@...> wrote: Hardy; I would be interested in your .pdf and any other 8920 related service or cal info. Thanks
Here is direct download link <; Information_Packet.pdf> Dean <; Information_Packet.pdf>
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Re: spectrum analyzer 1st mixer
On Tuesday 09 January 2007 21:30, Chuck Harris wrote: Hello , Thank you for the quick and detailed answer , sounds like that is my problem , I did inject -30dB signal directly in the input port of the mixer , problem is te same, so mixer is blown . I suppose home-repair of a 1st mixer HP style is not feasable ? rgds , Erik Hi,
I am not familiar with the exact part in question, but very often, spectrum analyzer mixers are of the double balanced diode type (DBM).
When working correctly, a DBM provides at least 20dB of isolation between the LO, RF, and IF ports. So, when you move the LO towards the low end of the band, like you are doing at 10MHz, the LO, and IF are approaching each other in frequency, until you hit zero (DC) Hz, where they are exactly the same frequency. If the DBM is working correctly, it will provide you with more than a 20DB isolation between the IF, and LO ports, which will reduce the amount of LO that goes right into the IF port by at least 20dB.
However, if the DBM has a burned out diode, it will no longer give you much, if any, isolation between the IF and LO ports, and you will see a drastically larger amount of LO signal being stuffed into the IF port. This cannot help but wreck the amplitude flatness at the low end of the band. At the high end of the band, this lack of isolation goes all but unnoticed because the IF filters are sufficiently steep to keep the LO signal out of the IF port.
-Chuck Harris
ericapple2004 wrote:
Hello , While the spectrumanalyzer pro-and contra's are actual on this group, may be someone can help with this: My 70904A RF module (HP70100 analyzer) works perfectly from 10 MHz to 2.9 GHz , however below 10 MHz amplitude flatness goes down rapidly , -20 dB at 1 MHz . Manual says problem with 1st mixer ?? I have difficulty to understand that the mixer can be shot and at the same time performing above 10 MHz without problem ?
Basic layout of the first stages are : 0-70 dB attenuator , switchable AC -DC , then limiter 10 mW dc-3GHz , then 1st mixer ...
I would guess a series resistor burned out , becoming a nice series capacitor that way ??
Any suggestions for repair ? Thanks Erik Belgium
PS . Other people using HP 70000 mms equipment on this group ,I like to share experience ?
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Hardy; I would be interested in your .pdf and any other 8920 related service or cal info. Thanks --- In hp_agilent_equipment@..., "Hardy Hansen" <hardyhansen@...> wrote: Hi I have the clip for 8920a in pdf.Do believe it was taken from
agilent manual section,but were removed . Can make a copy if needed. Regards Hardy ----- Original Message ----- From: nj902 To: hp_agilent_equipment@... Sent: Monday, January 08, 2007 9:54 PM Subject: [hp_agilent_equipment] Re: HP8920/A/B diagrams
--- In hp_agilent_equipment@..., "tunerwiz" <tunerwiz@> wrote: "I often wonder if Agilent have component level diagrams for these units? ..." --------------------------------------------------------
Answers to a previous thread indicated that this information exists.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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HP Manuals And Catalogs For Sale
Hello,
I have the following for sale:
External Time Base 17108A/17108AM. March 1967, with changes to Nov. 1967. $5.00.
DC Power Supply SCR-3 Series, Model 6456B. May, 1967. $5.00.
DC Power Supply MPB-5 Series, Model 6286A. Dec., 1966. $5.00.
HP 5300A Measurement System Operating And Service Manual. Revised March 1973. $15.00.
Catalogs -------- 1965 1967 1968 1969 1970 1972 1977 1978 1979 1980 1982 1988 1989
Please make an offer on ALL 13 catalogs.
All prices plus shipping.
Thank you,
Bruce WA8TNC
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