¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Date

Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

 

On 3/18/22 20:59, Bryce Schroeder wrote:
I've started "etching" PCBs with a fiber laser engraver. The bog
standard 1064 nm ones can do it, which somewhat surprised me. Glad to
not have to coat PCBs in photosensitive goo anymore since the laser
can remove copper and solder mask selectively. (Well, I still need goo
for silk screen, but that is much less critical.)
Sounds interesting for prototyping. Most of my designs make use of TQFP and LQFP packages with 0.5mm pin pitch; can the process and equipment you're using handle those? Which engraver are you using?

-Dave

--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA


Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

 

On 3/18/22 21:04, Lothar baier wrote:
I stopped doing it years ago mainly because the materials I mostly use ( Rogers 4350,6010) are not available with photo resist coating and if you send them out for coating than the lot charge is quite high ,also the process for plating through at home is not easy to do and requires quite nasty chemicals so I resort nowadays to just have the boards made by a board shop
Hey wait, weren't you the guy who was just complaining that nobody does anything anymore? ;)

-Dave


--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA


Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

Lothar baier
 

I stopped doing it years ago mainly because the materials I mostly use ( Rogers 4350,6010) are not available with photo resist coating and if you send them out for coating than the lot charge is quite high ,also the process for plating through at home is not easy to do and requires quite nasty chemicals so I resort nowadays to just have the boards made by a board shop

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Bryce Schroeder via groups.io
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 7:59 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

I've started "etching" PCBs with a fiber laser engraver. The bog standard 1064 nm ones can do it, which somewhat surprised me. Glad to not have to coat PCBs in photosensitive goo anymore since the laser can remove copper and solder mask selectively. (Well, I still need goo for silk screen, but that is much less critical.)


Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

 

I've started "etching" PCBs with a fiber laser engraver. The bog
standard 1064 nm ones can do it, which somewhat surprised me. Glad to
not have to coat PCBs in photosensitive goo anymore since the laser
can remove copper and solder mask selectively. (Well, I still need goo
for silk screen, but that is much less critical.)


Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

Lothar baier
 

Eventually dad bought a etch tank from isel , it used a different cchemical (ammonia persulphate ) and the agitation was done by the means of air bubbles generated by a airpump !
The problem with ferric chloride was that while it worked great for most boards dad did I had issues with under etching on my microwave boards

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Zentronics42 via groups.io
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 6:27 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

I still etch with ferric chloride here at the house. But I do use an earth sciences Hot shaker table with a water bath rather than food prep area. So at least some improvement.

Zen

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Lothar baier
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 6:55 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

Oh lord , I remember me and dad etching circuit boards using ferric chloride solution on the kitchen stove
On Mar 18, 2022, at 17:22, Dave McGuire via groups.io <mcguire@...> wrote:

?On 3/18/22 18:00, Zentronics42@... wrote:
Zen is one of my names I guess. Living in the digital age you seem to collect things like names.
I have gone by Zenwizard on line for going on 25 years now. For off line use I am an Eric, however there are also some that know me as Adain (there is a LONG off topic story there).
Ah, sorta. I've been living in that same digital age, but never did the nickname thing. We don't have rigid rules here, but this is a mailing list of mostly professional types, so we do prefer the use of given names. I'm by no means bossing you around on that, but just consider it a light suggestion from a list moderator.

Either way, welcome!

I am honestly looking to push the lab in to the RF space. But even now the gear is cost prohibitive to acquire at a rapid pace. I have recently (with in the last year) been able to acquire proper spectrum analyzers for the lab. HP E4411B and HP 8596E. I have my 10 Mhz reference sorted this year as well. So lab building is going well but it is slow. I am targeting some VNA and some microwave equipment as well as precision DC and calibration standards. I am in to the expensive toys it seems.
RF is great fun, and a wonderful thing to sink your teeth into. But yes, it does get expensive. The "good/fast/cheap (pick any two)" rule applies here; amazing deals can be had if you're patient, but personally I think patience isn't all it's cracked up to be. If we keep waiting, by the time we're dead, we'll have great stuff...No thanks! But really good deals do come along from time to time, if you're lucky.

Your E4411B and 8596E are a great start. You'll need some good signal sources too, and a good microwave counter. Next would probably be a power meter. Fortunately these are all pretty easy to come by, with the possible exception of a sensor for the power meter.

As for background it is extremely wide and varied. But most of it has been electronics based, computer based, or getting the two to talk to each other in some way.
I'll also be taking two students to their first swap meet in a few months... their first one will be the Dayton Hamvention. So we are going to start small?
Hahaaa yes, trial by fire indeed. ;) If their minds aren't totally blown by that, they might survive! B-)

I'm about 4.5hrs East of Dayton; I may have some gear for you, but you'd need some car space. That may be a challenge after Dayton. ;) I also run the Large Scale Systems Museum (google it) which you might find interesting, if it would be convenient for you to extend that Hamvention road trip.

-Dave

--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA





Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

Lothar baier
 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

I grew up just fine ?

?

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Adrian Godwin via groups.io
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 7:00 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

?

>?Oh lord , I remember me and dad etching circuit boards using ferric chloride solution on the kitchen stove

Truly dangerous.
Get a stain on the stove and you're toast!


Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

Lothar baier
 

Actually eventually I switched to ammonia persulphate , cheaper no smell and less stress with mom over holes in shirts ?

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Harvey White via groups.io
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 7:29 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

If you can get it, I'd suggest the CuCl method, about 4 parts Hydrogen peroxide (drugstore strength) and 1 part of Hydrochloric (muriatic) acid.? It'll need air bubbling through it as the hydrogen peroxide turns to water.

Lots cheaper.? Ferric chloride eventually turns up being CuCl, anyway.

Harvey


On 3/18/2022 7:26 PM, Zentronics42@... wrote:
I still etch with ferric chloride here at the house. But I do use an earth sciences Hot shaker table with a water bath rather than food prep area. So at least some improvement.

Zen

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
<[email protected]> On Behalf Of Lothar baier
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 6:55 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

Oh lord , I remember me and dad etching circuit boards using ferric
chloride solution on the kitchen stove
On Mar 18, 2022, at 17:22, Dave McGuire via groups.io <mcguire@...> wrote:

?On 3/18/22 18:00, Zentronics42@... wrote:
Zen is one of my names I guess. Living in the digital age you seem to collect things like names.
I have gone by Zenwizard on line for going on 25 years now. For off line use I am an Eric, however there are also some that know me as Adain (there is a LONG off topic story there).
Ah, sorta. I've been living in that same digital age, but never did the nickname thing. We don't have rigid rules here, but this is a mailing list of mostly professional types, so we do prefer the use of given names. I'm by no means bossing you around on that, but just consider it a light suggestion from a list moderator.

Either way, welcome!

I am honestly looking to push the lab in to the RF space. But even now the gear is cost prohibitive to acquire at a rapid pace. I have recently (with in the last year) been able to acquire proper spectrum analyzers for the lab. HP E4411B and HP 8596E. I have my 10 Mhz reference sorted this year as well. So lab building is going well but it is slow. I am targeting some VNA and some microwave equipment as well as precision DC and calibration standards. I am in to the expensive toys it seems.
RF is great fun, and a wonderful thing to sink your teeth into. But yes, it does get expensive. The "good/fast/cheap (pick any two)" rule applies here; amazing deals can be had if you're patient, but personally I think patience isn't all it's cracked up to be. If we keep waiting, by the time we're dead, we'll have great stuff...No thanks! But really good deals do come along from time to time, if you're lucky.

Your E4411B and 8596E are a great start. You'll need some good signal sources too, and a good microwave counter. Next would probably be a power meter. Fortunately these are all pretty easy to come by, with the possible exception of a sensor for the power meter.

As for background it is extremely wide and varied. But most of it has been electronics based, computer based, or getting the two to talk to each other in some way.
I'll also be taking two students to their first swap meet in a few months... their first one will be the Dayton Hamvention. So we are going to start small?
Hahaaa yes, trial by fire indeed. ;) If their minds aren't totally
blown by that, they might survive! B-)

I'm about 4.5hrs East of Dayton; I may have some gear for you, but you'd need some car space. That may be a challenge after Dayton. ;) I also run the Large Scale Systems Museum (google it) which you might find interesting, if it would be convenient for you to extend that Hamvention road trip.

-Dave

--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA














Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

 

If you can get it, I'd suggest the CuCl method, about 4 parts Hydrogen peroxide (drugstore strength) and 1 part of Hydrochloric (muriatic) acid.? It'll need air bubbling through it as the hydrogen peroxide turns to water.

Lots cheaper.? Ferric chloride eventually turns up being CuCl, anyway.

Harvey

On 3/18/2022 7:26 PM, Zentronics42@... wrote:
I still etch with ferric chloride here at the house. But I do use an earth sciences Hot shaker table with a water bath rather than food prep area. So at least some improvement.

Zen

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Lothar baier
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 6:55 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

Oh lord , I remember me and dad etching circuit boards using ferric chloride solution on the kitchen stove
On Mar 18, 2022, at 17:22, Dave McGuire via groups.io <mcguire@...> wrote:

?On 3/18/22 18:00, Zentronics42@... wrote:
Zen is one of my names I guess. Living in the digital age you seem to collect things like names.
I have gone by Zenwizard on line for going on 25 years now. For off line use I am an Eric, however there are also some that know me as Adain (there is a LONG off topic story there).
Ah, sorta. I've been living in that same digital age, but never did the nickname thing. We don't have rigid rules here, but this is a mailing list of mostly professional types, so we do prefer the use of given names. I'm by no means bossing you around on that, but just consider it a light suggestion from a list moderator.

Either way, welcome!

I am honestly looking to push the lab in to the RF space. But even now the gear is cost prohibitive to acquire at a rapid pace. I have recently (with in the last year) been able to acquire proper spectrum analyzers for the lab. HP E4411B and HP 8596E. I have my 10 Mhz reference sorted this year as well. So lab building is going well but it is slow. I am targeting some VNA and some microwave equipment as well as precision DC and calibration standards. I am in to the expensive toys it seems.
RF is great fun, and a wonderful thing to sink your teeth into. But yes, it does get expensive. The "good/fast/cheap (pick any two)" rule applies here; amazing deals can be had if you're patient, but personally I think patience isn't all it's cracked up to be. If we keep waiting, by the time we're dead, we'll have great stuff...No thanks! But really good deals do come along from time to time, if you're lucky.

Your E4411B and 8596E are a great start. You'll need some good signal sources too, and a good microwave counter. Next would probably be a power meter. Fortunately these are all pretty easy to come by, with the possible exception of a sensor for the power meter.

As for background it is extremely wide and varied. But most of it has been electronics based, computer based, or getting the two to talk to each other in some way.
I'll also be taking two students to their first swap meet in a few months... their first one will be the Dayton Hamvention. So we are going to start small?
Hahaaa yes, trial by fire indeed. ;) If their minds aren't totally blown by that, they might survive! B-)

I'm about 4.5hrs East of Dayton; I may have some gear for you, but you'd need some car space. That may be a challenge after Dayton. ;) I also run the Large Scale Systems Museum (google it) which you might find interesting, if it would be convenient for you to extend that Hamvention road trip.

-Dave

--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA













Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

If there is general consensus from members I could put a video out about it. Also the EEVblog is a good place and very active. But Will is correct there will be lots of power supply repair questions. Which is one of the reasons I started making videos. If I answered the same question more than twice it is worth the time to make a video. Especially when It comes to calibration and alignments.

?

Zen

?

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of William Ray via groups.io
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 8:20 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

?

I wonder if it would make any sense to try to get some of these kids onto this list.

That's something I had never considered, but, so long as the list doesn't mind some occasional naive questions, part of the role of their HS capstones is professional development, and introducing them to this world would certainly count.

The next time I have one or more of them interested in the device-engineering part of the lab, I'll introduce them to the group.

Some time I'll tell you about the patent we have for the world's stupidest MP3 player.? Sydney 1.0 developed and built the prototypes for that one too.? Far fewer fires in that story though!


Will
Turns out I'm not too far away from Dave - near Athens Ohio here.


Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

 

I wonder if it would make any sense to try to get some of these kids onto this list.
That's something I had never considered, but, so long as the list doesn't mind some occasional naive questions, part of the role of their HS capstones is professional development, and introducing them to this world would certainly count.

The next time I have one or more of them interested in the device-engineering part of the lab, I'll introduce them to the group.

Some time I'll tell you about the patent we have for the world's stupidest MP3 player.? Sydney 1.0 developed and built the prototypes for that one too.? Far fewer fires in that story though!


Will
Turns out I'm not too far away from Dave - near Athens Ohio here.


Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

 

>?Oh lord , I remember me and dad etching circuit boards using ferric chloride solution on the kitchen stove

Truly dangerous.
Get a stain on the stove and you're toast!


Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

 

I still etch with ferric chloride here at the house. But I do use an earth sciences Hot shaker table with a water bath rather than food prep area. So at least some improvement.

Zen

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Lothar baier
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 6:55 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

Oh lord , I remember me and dad etching circuit boards using ferric chloride solution on the kitchen stove
On Mar 18, 2022, at 17:22, Dave McGuire via groups.io <mcguire@...> wrote:

?On 3/18/22 18:00, Zentronics42@... wrote:
Zen is one of my names I guess. Living in the digital age you seem to collect things like names.
I have gone by Zenwizard on line for going on 25 years now. For off line use I am an Eric, however there are also some that know me as Adain (there is a LONG off topic story there).
Ah, sorta. I've been living in that same digital age, but never did the nickname thing. We don't have rigid rules here, but this is a mailing list of mostly professional types, so we do prefer the use of given names. I'm by no means bossing you around on that, but just consider it a light suggestion from a list moderator.

Either way, welcome!

I am honestly looking to push the lab in to the RF space. But even now the gear is cost prohibitive to acquire at a rapid pace. I have recently (with in the last year) been able to acquire proper spectrum analyzers for the lab. HP E4411B and HP 8596E. I have my 10 Mhz reference sorted this year as well. So lab building is going well but it is slow. I am targeting some VNA and some microwave equipment as well as precision DC and calibration standards. I am in to the expensive toys it seems.
RF is great fun, and a wonderful thing to sink your teeth into. But yes, it does get expensive. The "good/fast/cheap (pick any two)" rule applies here; amazing deals can be had if you're patient, but personally I think patience isn't all it's cracked up to be. If we keep waiting, by the time we're dead, we'll have great stuff...No thanks! But really good deals do come along from time to time, if you're lucky.

Your E4411B and 8596E are a great start. You'll need some good signal sources too, and a good microwave counter. Next would probably be a power meter. Fortunately these are all pretty easy to come by, with the possible exception of a sensor for the power meter.

As for background it is extremely wide and varied. But most of it has been electronics based, computer based, or getting the two to talk to each other in some way.
I'll also be taking two students to their first swap meet in a few months... their first one will be the Dayton Hamvention. So we are going to start small?
Hahaaa yes, trial by fire indeed. ;) If their minds aren't totally blown by that, they might survive! B-)

I'm about 4.5hrs East of Dayton; I may have some gear for you, but you'd need some car space. That may be a challenge after Dayton. ;) I also run the Large Scale Systems Museum (google it) which you might find interesting, if it would be convenient for you to extend that Hamvention road trip.

-Dave

--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA





Re: 8516A cable question

 

Well I was thinking of separating the operational status of the doubler filter from the logic / control / RF drive component. It is difficult to diagnose one without knowing whether the other is functional. An excellent opportunity to "chase your tail."

Cheers!

Bruce

Quoting Lothar baier <Lothar@...>:

Ok before jumping to conclusions and re-engineering how about figuring out what¡¯s really wrong with it ? If you talk about removing and rewiring you might as well get a control board from a 8517A and turn the 8516 into a 17 then all you need is a 40GHz 8360 ?
On Mar 18, 2022, at 17:47, Bruce via groups.io <bruce@...> wrote:

?Can he pull the 40GHz section (filter, doubler, relay, etc) out of the 8516, and use DC levels to control it while driving it with the 8340 That way he could eliminate the doubler/filter as the root of the problem.

Cheers!

Bruce

Quoting Lothar baier <Lothar@...>:

Agilent initially used the DB25 for the 8410 interface , when the 8516 was conceived ( as a response to wiltron being the first one to introduced a 40GHz VNA ) they repurposed the interface to control the doubler and filter module , this change encompassed a different CPU board 08340-60299 and upgraded FW , for synthesizers with 2812A upwards this was incorporated while for older sources a upgrade was offered by HP !
The control interface was maintained on the 8360 series even though the 8360 series unlike the older 8340/41 models offered coverage to 50GHz mostly because the 8516 can not operate with a 40GHz source , agilent of course could have offered a HW upgrade to either bypass or remove the doubler module and change the input connector for the source input but at the time the 8360 series came out they also had the 8517 testset which covered to 50GHz so I guess agilent saw a opportunity to sell new testsets ?

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of aves via groups.io
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 3:17 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] 8516A cable question

The only fix is to have the correct output from the 8340-41! The older source label says 8410B-C Interface and they mean it. We need the Auxiliary Interface like the 83621A dedicated sweeper for the 8510C which might be documented in the service manual.










Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

Lothar baier
 

Oh lord , I remember me and dad etching circuit boards using ferric chloride solution on the kitchen stove

On Mar 18, 2022, at 17:22, Dave McGuire via groups.io <mcguire@...> wrote:

?On 3/18/22 18:00, Zentronics42@... wrote:
Zen is one of my names I guess. Living in the digital age you seem to collect things like names.
I have gone by Zenwizard on line for going on 25 years now. For off line use I am an Eric, however there are also some that know me as Adain (there is a LONG off topic story there).
Ah, sorta. I've been living in that same digital age, but never did the nickname thing. We don't have rigid rules here, but this is a mailing list of mostly professional types, so we do prefer the use of given names. I'm by no means bossing you around on that, but just consider it a light suggestion from a list moderator.

Either way, welcome!

I am honestly looking to push the lab in to the RF space. But even now the gear is cost prohibitive to acquire at a rapid pace. I have recently (with in the last year) been able to acquire proper spectrum analyzers for the lab. HP E4411B and HP 8596E. I have my 10 Mhz reference sorted this year as well. So lab building is going well but it is slow. I am targeting some VNA and some microwave equipment as well as precision DC and calibration standards. I am in to the expensive toys it seems.
RF is great fun, and a wonderful thing to sink your teeth into. But yes, it does get expensive. The "good/fast/cheap (pick any two)" rule applies here; amazing deals can be had if you're patient, but personally I think patience isn't all it's cracked up to be. If we keep waiting, by the time we're dead, we'll have great stuff...No thanks! But really good deals do come along from time to time, if you're lucky.

Your E4411B and 8596E are a great start. You'll need some good signal sources too, and a good microwave counter. Next would probably be a power meter. Fortunately these are all pretty easy to come by, with the possible exception of a sensor for the power meter.

As for background it is extremely wide and varied. But most of it has been electronics based, computer based, or getting the two to talk to each other in some way.
I'll also be taking two students to their first swap meet in a few months... their first one will be the Dayton Hamvention. So we are going to start small?
Hahaaa yes, trial by fire indeed. ;) If their minds aren't totally blown by that, they might survive! B-)

I'm about 4.5hrs East of Dayton; I may have some gear for you, but you'd need some car space. That may be a challenge after Dayton. ;) I also run the Large Scale Systems Museum (google it) which you might find interesting, if it would be convenient for you to extend that Hamvention road trip.

-Dave

--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA





Re: 8516A cable question

Lothar baier
 

Ok before jumping to conclusions and re-engineering how about figuring out what¡¯s really wrong with it ? If you talk about removing and rewiring you might as well get a control board from a 8517A and turn the 8516 into a 17 then all you need is a 40GHz 8360 ?

On Mar 18, 2022, at 17:47, Bruce via groups.io <bruce@...> wrote:

?Can he pull the 40GHz section (filter, doubler, relay, etc) out of the 8516, and use DC levels to control it while driving it with the 8340 That way he could eliminate the doubler/filter as the root of the problem.

Cheers!

Bruce

Quoting Lothar baier <Lothar@...>:

Agilent initially used the DB25 for the 8410 interface , when the 8516 was conceived ( as a response to wiltron being the first one to introduced a 40GHz VNA ) they repurposed the interface to control the doubler and filter module , this change encompassed a different CPU board 08340-60299 and upgraded FW , for synthesizers with 2812A upwards this was incorporated while for older sources a upgrade was offered by HP !
The control interface was maintained on the 8360 series even though the 8360 series unlike the older 8340/41 models offered coverage to 50GHz mostly because the 8516 can not operate with a 40GHz source , agilent of course could have offered a HW upgrade to either bypass or remove the doubler module and change the input connector for the source input but at the time the 8360 series came out they also had the 8517 testset which covered to 50GHz so I guess agilent saw a opportunity to sell new testsets ?

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of aves via groups.io
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 3:17 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] 8516A cable question

The only fix is to have the correct output from the 8340-41! The older source label says 8410B-C Interface and they mean it. We need the Auxiliary Interface like the 83621A dedicated sweeper for the 8510C which might be documented in the service manual.









Re: 8516A cable question

 

Can he pull the 40GHz section (filter, doubler, relay, etc) out of the 8516, and use DC levels to control it while driving it with the 8340 That way he could eliminate the doubler/filter as the root of the problem.

Cheers!

Bruce

Quoting Lothar baier <Lothar@...>:

Agilent initially used the DB25 for the 8410 interface , when the 8516 was conceived ( as a response to wiltron being the first one to introduced a 40GHz VNA ) they repurposed the interface to control the doubler and filter module , this change encompassed a different CPU board 08340-60299 and upgraded FW , for synthesizers with 2812A upwards this was incorporated while for older sources a upgrade was offered by HP !
The control interface was maintained on the 8360 series even though the 8360 series unlike the older 8340/41 models offered coverage to 50GHz mostly because the 8516 can not operate with a 40GHz source , agilent of course could have offered a HW upgrade to either bypass or remove the doubler module and change the input connector for the source input but at the time the 8360 series came out they also had the 8517 testset which covered to 50GHz so I guess agilent saw a opportunity to sell new testsets ?

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of aves via groups.io
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 3:17 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] 8516A cable question

The only fix is to have the correct output from the 8340-41! The older source label says 8410B-C Interface and they mean it. We need the Auxiliary Interface like the 83621A dedicated sweeper for the 8510C which might be documented in the service manual.




Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

 

On 3/18/22 18:00, Zentronics42@... wrote:
Zen is one of my names I guess. Living in the digital age you seem to collect things like names.
I have gone by Zenwizard on line for going on 25 years now. For off line use I am an Eric, however there are also some that know me as Adain (there is a LONG off topic story there).
Ah, sorta. I've been living in that same digital age, but never did the nickname thing. We don't have rigid rules here, but this is a mailing list of mostly professional types, so we do prefer the use of given names. I'm by no means bossing you around on that, but just consider it a light suggestion from a list moderator.

Either way, welcome!

I am honestly looking to push the lab in to the RF space. But even now the gear is cost prohibitive to acquire at a rapid pace. I have recently (with in the last year) been able to acquire proper spectrum analyzers for the lab. HP E4411B and HP 8596E. I have my 10 Mhz reference sorted this year as well. So lab building is going well but it is slow. I am targeting some VNA and some microwave equipment as well as precision DC and calibration standards. I am in to the expensive toys it seems.
RF is great fun, and a wonderful thing to sink your teeth into. But yes, it does get expensive. The "good/fast/cheap (pick any two)" rule applies here; amazing deals can be had if you're patient, but personally I think patience isn't all it's cracked up to be. If we keep waiting, by the time we're dead, we'll have great stuff...No thanks! But really good deals do come along from time to time, if you're lucky.

Your E4411B and 8596E are a great start. You'll need some good signal sources too, and a good microwave counter. Next would probably be a power meter. Fortunately these are all pretty easy to come by, with the possible exception of a sensor for the power meter.

As for background it is extremely wide and varied. But most of it has been electronics based, computer based, or getting the two to talk to each other in some way.
I'll also be taking two students to their first swap meet in a few months... their first one will be the Dayton Hamvention. So we are going to start small?
Hahaaa yes, trial by fire indeed. ;) If their minds aren't totally blown by that, they might survive! B-)

I'm about 4.5hrs East of Dayton; I may have some gear for you, but you'd need some car space. That may be a challenge after Dayton. ;) I also run the Large Scale Systems Museum (google it) which you might find interesting, if it would be convenient for you to extend that Hamvention road trip.

-Dave

--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA


Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

 

Dave,
Zen is one of my names I guess. Living in the digital age you seem to collect things like names. I have gone by Zenwizard on line for going on 25 years now. For off line use I am an Eric, however there are also some that know me as Adain (there is a LONG off topic story there). I am honestly looking to push the lab in to the RF space. But even now the gear is cost prohibitive to acquire at a rapid pace. I have recently (with in the last year) been able to acquire proper spectrum analyzers for the lab. HP E4411B and HP 8596E. I have my 10 Mhz reference sorted this year as well. So lab building is going well but it is slow. I am targeting some VNA and some microwave equipment as well as precision DC and calibration standards. I am in to the expensive toys it seems.

As for background it is extremely wide and varied. But most of it has been electronics based, computer based, or getting the two to talk to each other in some way.
I'll also be taking two students to their first swap meet in a few months... their first one will be the Dayton Hamvention. So we are going to start small?

Zen

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Dave McGuire
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 5:24 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

On 3/18/22 17:19, Zentronics42@... wrote:
I will toss in at least 2 pennies worth as I would be just coming out of being considered one of the kids. I still work with high school students in vocation programs and definitely can tell things are alive and well. But here is a few points The current generation has been told FAR to often that "this is for some one else not for you" way to often, My self included to be honest. There was a shift from "go figure it out" to "that is too dangerous" I am the only person I know of with in 400 miles that is willing to work on vacuum tube equipment due to the high voltages involved. I have run in to many that are terrified of dying touching 12Vdc. Let alone 21KVdc of an anode discharge tube in a CRT scope.

To that end I even started a you tube channel linked in to show people how to spin up a lab from scratch. But if some one young is told to often "that is too dangerous" they start to believe it. This is true for anything Voltage is high HV or HP circuits. As well as chemicals needed to facilitate board making at home.
Yeah, there's been a huge "wrap them in bubble wrap and protect them from every possible danger" movement among parents in the past few decades.

I'll be turning 53 on Monday. I lived in a house with lead-based paint, I had several chemistry sets, worked on tube gear, etc etc etc...and somehow I survived.

Bravo for not being afraid of everything. Zero risk is zero life, and as you've found, most of the "risks" that people whine about are BS.

Yes the channel is Tek equipment heavy but I would like to get some more HP gear on there as well but I don¡¯t know where to start.
Well, you've come to the right place.

Youtube Channel for test equipment repair -
I will check it out.

Zen
(is that your real name?)

-Dave

--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA


Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

 

Bob¡¯s wife obviously remembered that his life insurance policy had lapsed¡­




On Friday, March 18, 2022, 17:30, n4buq <n4buq@...> wrote:

Reminds me of the rain gutter commercials.

Presenter: "How many of you use a ladder to clean your gutters?"

Bob raises his hand.

Presenter: "Bob - that's way too dangerous for you to be climbing a ladder!"

Bob's wife looks at Bob with a very worried look on her face as Bob slowly and sheepishly lowers his hand.

Me: "What's wrong with you people?!!"

Barry - N4BUQ

----- Original Message -----
> From: "zentronics42" <Zentronics42@...>
> To: "HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment" <[email protected]>
> Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 4:19:06 PM
> Subject: Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

> I will toss in at least 2 pennies worth as I would be just coming out of being
> considered one of the kids. I still work with high school students in vocation
> programs and definitely can tell things are alive and well. But here is a few
> points The current generation has been told FAR to often that "this is for some
> one else not for you" way to often, My self included to be honest. There was a
> shift from "go figure it out" to "that is too dangerous" I am the only person I
> know of with in 400 miles that is willing to work on vacuum tube equipment due
> to the high voltages involved. I have run in to many that are terrified of
> dying touching 12Vdc. Let alone 21KVdc of an anode discharge tube in a CRT
> scope.
>
> To that end I even started a you tube channel linked in to show people how to
> spin up a lab from scratch. But if some one young is told to often "that is too
> dangerous" they start to believe it. This is true for anything Voltage is high
> HV or HP circuits. As well as chemicals needed to facilitate board making at
> home.
>
> Yes the channel is Tek equipment heavy but I would like to get some more HP gear
> on there as well but I don¡¯t know where to start.
>
> Youtube Channel for test equipment repair -
>
>
> Zen
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected]
> <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Dave McGuire
> Sent: Friday, March 18, 2022 4:59 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap
> Meet Returns!
>
> On 3/18/22 16:42, Lothar baier wrote:
>> *Currently there are many online circuit simulators and test equipment
>> interfaces ( Not sure about online but many software companies started
>> to offer hobbyist or non commercial licenses for their tools at very
>> low cost )
>
>? There are many, both online and real software.? Most of the world's circuit
>? simulation software has been free effectively forever.? Much of it derives from
>? SPICE, which has been public domain since day one.
> (1973)? Of course there have always been corporations popping up charging people
> for things that the rest of the world gets for free, as always.
>
>? One very handy one for more practical/less academic work is the Falstad circuit
>? simulator, originally written as a browser-based Java applet but it has been
>? packaged for sane standalone use (i.e., not in a web browser) too.? Very handy.
>
>? ? ? ? ? -Dave
>
> --
> Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
> New Kensington, PA
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>






Re: BS, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] Spread the word -- Swap Meet Returns!

 

" *Once folks have an opportunity to cheaply develop a real interest, TinySA and NanoVNA will not be enough (?definatly true?)"

Not to sound too blasphemic, but I wager most folks, including some "far mid-range" in terms of their interest?in - for instance - FM tuners, when in a literal minute, including whipping out their NanoVNA?+ mini-fixture, hooking it up on USB to their lab computer, plug a given filter in, run their saved sweep (this one below is just a quick one I whipped together, so please disregard the haste), can come?up with something?like this:
image.png
I am finding a bit of inconsistency between subsequent measurements, calibration may be a bit off - though the kit does include?a?calibration set - but it's so convenient and truly a gateway little device?to far more sophistication?than one may assume they "deserve..." (being "hobby engineers")

By that I mean to point out the incredible accessibility these little devices provide. In a meaningful way, the core of this conversation at this juncture.?
Radu.?



On Fri, Mar 18, 2022 at 1:59 PM Dave McGuire <mcguire@...> wrote:
On 3/18/22 16:42, Lothar baier wrote:
> *Currently there are many online circuit?simulators and test equipment
> interfaces ( Not sure about online but many software companies started
> to offer hobbyist or non commercial licenses for their tools at very low
> cost )

? ?There are many, both online and real software.? Most of the world's
circuit simulation software has been free effectively forever.? Much of
it derives from SPICE, which has been public domain since day one.
(1973)? Of course there have always been corporations popping up
charging people for things that the rest of the world gets for free, as
always.

? ?One very handy one for more practical/less academic work is the
Falstad circuit simulator, originally written as a browser-based Java
applet but it has been packaged for sane standalone use (i.e., not in a
web browser) too.? Very handy.

? ? ? ? ? ?-Dave

--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA