On Wed, 3 Oct 2018 07:24:37 -0700, you wrote:
Yeah, they said I could return it for proper disposal but I would like
to keep it and probably give it to the Tek museum eventually if they are
interested although it's probably too new for them. It was a little
pricey, $10.
Yeah, I could live with that, too.
I'd plug it in and see if it will enumerate anything, no idea what it
would show up as. Easiest thing would be a serial terminal and then
you start to throw commands at it (or disassemble the code if that's
even possible).
Looks interesting, though. I'd assume they have no software, of
course.
Harvey
Bob.
On 10/3/2018 6:52 AM, Harvey White wrote:
On Wed, 3 Oct 2018 06:22:20 -0700, you wrote:
I sent emails to Tek asking them what it is.? Finally, got a reply that
it was a prototype that was never put into production.
/g/TekScopes/album?id=71356&p=Name,,,20,1,0,0
I'd keep it for the sheer reason that it's unique. Hopefully, it
wasn't too expensive.
Might be able to get it working, might not.
Harvey
Bob.
On 9/13/2018 8:30 AM, Robert Hay wrote:
I picked up what is apparently a Tek scope.? But, I can't find a model
number or any information about it.? I looks like the Tektronix
version of the Pico scope which uses a USB connection to a computer.
Here is a link to the photos:
/g/TekScopes/album?id=71356&p=Name,,,20,1,0,0
Anybody have one or know when it was made, etc?
Bob.