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Re: Reverse part lockups

Dallas Smith
 

Sorry all for any confusion, was just looking for someway to reverse part lookup. I have a large number of Tek PC Boards to use for parts but take a lot of time to find an available part from. Was not aware of the TekWiki RPR's file supplied by the Tek Museum, couldn't find them from the home page index. In my opinion the RPR files are somewhat useless without the ability to search them. I think making them full OCR is different than making them searchable. I send Raymond a unlocked version on the 155 RPR for him to checkout to see if it could be compressed more. Are there more RPR files for other parts available somewhere, such as the 156 parts?

With permission I would be willing to unlock all the PRP files for Raymond to process. Raymond is looking for ways to make large PDF's more usable to us. If Raymond can not make them searchable I would be willing to spend the four or more hours to do so if legal, but will still be unlocked.

Any thoughts Dennis?

On Thu, Aug 27, 2020 at 09:21 PM, Dallas Smith wrote:


Hello today,
Is there a master list somewhere for reverse part number lockups. Provide a
part number to see what Tek models use that part. Tek must have had mainframe
computer listings of such data? Any retired Tek employees here have access to
such a list? Tek might sign off for such a request from old equipment that
they will never support.
The obvious answer is no such luck.
Dallas


1S1 sampling unit; (also 7B53AN & 7A18 plugins)

 

Hi all,
just acquired the above (but missed out on the actual TEK scope), all at a local recycling centre.
Would like to buy a TEK scope, working or not, in which I can use the 1S1.
Is anyone prepared to dispose of a suitable TEK scope? Plus carriage to Oz at cost.
Alternatively there is a Heathkit IO-14 (8MHz, valves/tubes, triggers to 2.5 MHz) on its way to me.
Maybe I could use the 1S1 in this, with suitable connections? I have the IO-14 schematic, but Heathkit Manuals have now been commercialised.
Any advice appreciated.
Thanks & Regards
David C.


Re: 4-pin Lemo connector used on end of cable for 4041 PD keyboard

 

On Mon, Aug 31, 2020 at 06:04 PM, Gary Robert Bosworth wrote:


If the
connector is the correct one (it is only about 5/16" diameter with a
"D"-shaped 4-pin insulator inside), name your price and I will pay through
any means you desire. I will contact you in a day or so to remind you of
my needs. Bye for now.
Hi Gary,
I checked. It is indeed the connector that I thought. It is the same Tek used for the power supply connection of probes like the P6201 and P6202A. You'll find the same sockets on 'scopes like the 7104, 7854, 7904(A). It is Tek part no. 131-0778-00. The 1101 PSU has four sockets for them.

I checked and double-checked the Lemo part no: FFA.0S.304.CLAC42. Digikey (USA) currently has 5 in stock @ a lot of money, something like USD 30.

I have only a few left (as sets with sockets, actually, have a few more sockets and counter-plugs) and sending from the Netherlands may be costly, maybe about (half) as much as the Digikey price. That would leave little left for me if I'd want to "compete".

Have a look and if you still want me to send one (Digikey total cost, order cost), let me know your ZIP code, I'll check postal costs and we can go from there.

Raymond


Re: Strange Tek2440 issue

 

Repet on, Repet off, no difference.

Vince.

On 08/31/2020 01:42 AM, Roger Evans via groups.io wrote:
100nsec per div and faster sounds like the switch from real time sampling to equivalent time interpolation (300Msample/sec real time). You can turn off the equivalent time mode by going to the Acquire menu and setting 'Repet' to Off. If that enables you to get to faster sweep speeds then the problem is clearly in the circuitry that does the equivalent time interpolation but I would need a thorough read of the manual to go into any detail!

Regards,

Roger

--
K8ZW


Re: TDS3054 Replacement of DALLAS DS1742W (U640), data content in NV-RAM

 

some of the chinese fakes do actually work and identical to the original but since their date code is also old they ma not last that long
I also got several fakes that didnt work until I got this one that worked as yours does. The fakes that didnt work are visibly larger in size than the original one
I also got a fake one that worked perfectly fine as DS1742 but not as a DS1742W !
but I am surprised that why your clock is not working. The chip that I got worked. But as I said the date code is already 12 years old so it may not last
assuming that it is a real date code!

as far as I know the hours are stored at those two places. when I changed both to a new number the scope showed the correct # of hours


Re: TDS3054 Replacement of DALLAS DS1742W (U640), data content in NV-RAM

 

Hello all,

thank you very much for your replies. Here is my list of
actions (so far):

1.
The 'chinese part' worked ok in a programmer (readable,
writeable, reasonable content in the registers 0x7F8...0x7FF), also see
my question A. below

2.
I desoldered the old DS1742W from the TDS3054 mainboard and
replaced it with socket strips

3.
I programmed the chinese DS1742W with all 0xFF in the address range
0x000...0x7F7 (not touching the registers).

4.
I put the chinese DS1742W into the socket and powered the scope up for
a couple of minutes and to have a look into the system menus.
- date/time appeared as '6 Apr 22 2:40:80' (not counting up)
- Cal menu text: 'The last factory calibration occurred 0 (operating) hours
ago on 19-Dec-2001
- Cal menu text: 'The last SPC occured 0 (operating) hours ago on 8-Nov-2006'
- System Errors: 15, Display Errors: 15 (so no errors on other subunits)
- Total operating time: 0 hours
- Number of Power Ups: 206
Also see my question B. below


5.
After shutting down the scope I read out the chinese DS1742W on the
programmer to see which entries had been changed from 0xFF to
something else. Following is the RAM content by address:
0x000 ... 0x297, mixture of random-looking values
0x298 ... 0x61F, all bytes 0x00
0x620 ... 0x63F, all bytes 0xFF
0x640 ... 0x6DB, mostly 0x00 but also non-zero values in between
0x6DC ... 0x7DF, all bytes 0xFF
0x7E0...0x7E3, 4 bytes: 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x04
0x7E4 ... 0x7E7, 4 bytes: 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x04
0x7E8...0x7EB, 4 bytes: 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x04
0x7EC ... 0x7EF, 4 bytes: 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00
0x7F0 ... 0x7F7, all bytes 0xFF
0x7F8...0x7FF, register map as described in datasheet.
Also see my question C. below


Questions and remarks:

A.
What 'special characteristics' can be found with a
chinese fake chip? Is it an empty housing containing
nothing but only rows of pins sticking out?
My chinese version had the exact physical
appearance of the housing and the same look of the
potting from the bottom side.
Weight:
Chip from TDS3054: 7,21g
Chinese DS1742W: 7,38g

B.
The clock cannot be running because the /OSC-bit
register 0x7F9 bit7 is set to '1'. The scope obviously
does not reprogram this bit.
The number of power ups seems to be stored somewhere
else but not in the DS1742W. The value of '206' is ok because
it was at '203' when the scope operated correctly the last time
before the DS1742W failed.

C.
The scope seems to write nearly into the whole memory,
the content at 0x000 ... 0x297 seems to be 'mystery' (or
perhaps random garbage).
The value (hex) 00 00 00 04 appears 3 times. Could it
be that the total operating time is stored 3 times
(and not twice as written by AMIRB)?
The value 4 is reasonable because the scope was
switched on for about 4 minutes.
Any remarks on the meaning of the other values?

Thanks again!

Best regards
-Roland


Re: Reverse part lockups

 

On Sun, Aug 30, 2020 at 04:48 PM, Raymond Domp Frank wrote:


I have -151 ready, just waiting for "permission"(?) to upload. Good OCR and
size reduced to 196MB with little quality degradation. Non-reduced is also
available, almost same size as before.
I'm giving this another try in this thread.

This message is directed at

Dave Brown (Tek Museum):

1. Do you consider these files free to unlock for the purpose of OCR'ing, possibly reducing in size, and re-uploading to TekWiki or not, either because of a copyright claim or a necessary/missing release by Tektronix not allowing this use?

2. If you consider them not free for the above purpose, will you propose a way forward to make them available?

Raymond


Re: 4-pin Lemo connector used on end of cable for 4041 PD keyboard

 

Raymond: Thank you for all the trouble you are going thru. If the
connector is the correct one (it is only about 5/16" diameter with a
"D"-shaped 4-pin insulator inside), name your price and I will pay through
any means you desire. I will contact you in a day or so to remind you of
my needs. Bye for now.

Gary

On Sat, Aug 29, 2020 at 3:54 PM Raymond Domp Frank <hewpatek@...>
wrote:

On Sun, Aug 30, 2020 at 12:38 AM, Gary Robert Bosworth wrote:


I need to purchase the connector used on the end of the cable of the PD
keyboard that attaches to the front panel of the 4041. It looks like a
4-pin
LEMO round silver connector. I cannot find this part listed even on the
keyboard's manual listings.
If it's the same as the power connector for FET probes, I probably have
one for you, could be NOS. Also, if its diameter is bigger than the
FET-ones.
I have a 4041 in the lab and will be there on Monday and check 4041 and
plug availability. Remind me Tuesday if I don't respond with details if I
forget - and if you want.
Would have to be shipped from the Netherlands, price to be determined but
not ridiculous: make me an offer if we get there.

Raymond



--
Gary Robert Bosworth
grbosworth@...
Tel: 310-317-2247


Re: 5441 rack / bench conversion document

 

From Tim P (UK)
Many thanks for that - as I suspected, it is necessary to unsolder the
delay line and re-attach to the interface board. :-(
Otherwise a topological conundrum involving a fourth (spacial) dimension
!!!
Tim

On Mon, 31 Aug 2020 at 16:04, zenith5106 <hahi@...> wrote:

On Sun, Aug 30, 2020 at 08:29 PM, Tim Phillips wrote:


Does anyone (Hakan?) have the documents detailing the conversion
between rack / bench formats ?
They are here now:



They are scanned from microfiche using a photo scanner so unfortunately
the quality
doesn't get any better than that, sorry.

/H?kan




Re: Tektronix TDS3PRT Printer

 

Since a previous message to this group I have been seeking an explanation for the scarcity of of available information on tthe TDS3PRT printer and the reason for its discontinuance. I have been hoping to find the manual or instructions furnished with this printer and any software that might have been furnished with it. What I have learned so far is that according to a Wikipedia article:

"Reports began surfacing in the 2000s finding the oestrogen-related chemical bispheonol A ("BPA") [is] mixed in with thermal (and some other) papers. While the health concerns are very uncertain, various health and science oriented political pressure organizations such as the Environmental Working Group have pressed fro these versions to be pulled from market." This may be the explanation.

The TDS3PRT printers bear Sony/Tektronix labels with J prefixes. A source confirmed they were manufactured by Sony. Sony has manufactured several high-quality thermal printer models for medical applications such as ultrasound scans. Another source indicated the TDS3PRT used 110 mm paper rolls. Sony also employed this width paper rolls in their printers and offered at least three grades from normal to highly glossy, UPP-110S, UPP-110HD, and UPP-110HG. These remain available from eBay and Amazon sources and may be compatible with the Tektronix printer. I have not found any source for the Tektronix 016-1907-00 paper (5 rolls).

Sony, being the manufacturer, may have nixed public release of the manuals. One former seller mentioned the manual was available on apexwaves.com, but the file has apparently been pulled down.

Are any of these printers to be found in the hands of members of this group? Can anyone provide further information, particularly a source for the manual?

Bruce, KG6OJI


Re: 5441 rack / bench conversion document

 

On Sun, Aug 30, 2020 at 08:29 PM, Tim Phillips wrote:


Does anyone (Hakan?) have the documents detailing the conversion between rack / bench formats ?
They are here now:



They are scanned from microfiche using a photo scanner so unfortunately the quality
doesn't get any better than that, sorry.

/H?kan


Re: Reverse part lockups

 

Please post.

larry


Re: TDS3054 Replacement of DALLAS DS1742W (U640), data content in NV-RAM

 

A DS1742W from China? Chances are really high it's a counterfeit. Here's an eevblog thread that has some pictures of a China fake vs real:



The dimensions are a giveaway, at least on that one.

Further in that thread, there's a link to someone who made an adapter board for a DS1744WP, which is still available from reputable sources (Mouser, Digikey, etc). Functionally, it's the same as the DS1742W, but with more SRAM that would never be accessed. The adapter board fits TDS3000 scopes.

I ended up doing surgery on my old DS1742W to connect an external battery. I'd recommend not throwing away your old DS1742W, and install a DIP socket.

-mark


Re: Tek 7854 intermittent issues

 

On Mon, Aug 31, 2020 at 01:12 AM, Nick Corvid wrote:

And in response to Albert, you are correct that it's missing
chunks of the horizontal in dots mode, or were until I had set up my camera to
take pictures and the behavior changed again.(this thing is making me crazy!)
Leading to these pictures:
Vector mode: /g/TekScopes/photo/252782/1?p=Created,,,20,2,0,0
Dots mode: /g/TekScopes/photo/252782/0?p=Created,,,20,2,0,0
Hi Nick, the dot pattern is not what I expected. It seems that still linear interpolation is done to fill missing horizontal positions. I expected to see no dots at all during some wide horizontal gaps. Anyway, in my opinion it's clear that data are missing. In your new photos there is also a negative outlier and, very strange, a negative trace near the end of the sweep which looks like a inverted portion of the correct waveform. In the correct waveform the rising edges end more or less rounded while the falling edges are sharp. Wrong sign bit?

I thought I would see horizontal gaps when I do a too fast single sweep acquisition. But my 7854 simply refuses AQS with a nasty beep.
Albert


Re: Strange Tek2440 issue

 

100nsec per div and faster sounds like the switch from real time sampling to equivalent time interpolation (300Msample/sec real time). You can turn off the equivalent time mode by going to the Acquire menu and setting 'Repet' to Off. If that enables you to get to faster sweep speeds then the problem is clearly in the circuitry that does the equivalent time interpolation but I would need a thorough read of the manual to go into any detail!

Regards,

Roger


HC100 Plotter - gpib interface board wanted

 

Hi,

I own the HC100 plotter with the RS232 option.

I'd be happy to swap this for the GPIB option if anyone out there has
one they don't want. Sorry I don't know the part # -- it doesn't seem to
be in the manual. Pens would also be of interest.

Thanks
--Toby


Re: Tek 7854 intermittent issues

 

Q141, sheet <11> coordinates E2. The other transistor in the clamp is Q41,
coordinates E5.

Dave Casey

On Sun, Aug 30, 2020 at 6:12 PM Nick Corvid <awsomedrack@...> wrote:

Thank you for the suggestion Dave, I'll have a look at where the power
supply points are located in the manual and see if anything seems out of
spec when I'm next able. And in response to Albert, you are correct that
it's missing chunks of the horizontal in dots mode, or were until I had set
up my camera to take pictures and the behavior changed again.(this thing is
making me crazy!) Leading to these pictures:
Vector mode:
/g/TekScopes/photo/252782/1?p=Created,,,20,2,0,0
Dots mode:
/g/TekScopes/photo/252782/0?p=Created,,,20,2,0,0

Some of the issues can be found in analog modes, but usually only very
intermittently, for example the trace jittering horizontally even with a
solid trigger (and the intensity for the A time-base but I'm pretty sure
that is just a dirty pot). Also this may be unrelated as I don't know
exactly what operating as intended is but one of the transistors on what I
am fairly certain is the horizontal amp board can get very hot to the touch
while the others stay cool when the machine has been running for over 10
minutes.
This is the transistor in question:
/g/TekScopes/photo/252782/2?p=Created,,,20,2,0,0 .
Haven't had the time to find where it lives on the circuit diagram




Re: Tek 7854 intermittent issues

 

Thank you for the suggestion Dave, I'll have a look at where the power supply points are located in the manual and see if anything seems out of spec when I'm next able. And in response to Albert, you are correct that it's missing chunks of the horizontal in dots mode, or were until I had set up my camera to take pictures and the behavior changed again.(this thing is making me crazy!) Leading to these pictures:
Vector mode: /g/TekScopes/photo/252782/1?p=Created,,,20,2,0,0
Dots mode: /g/TekScopes/photo/252782/0?p=Created,,,20,2,0,0

Some of the issues can be found in analog modes, but usually only very intermittently, for example the trace jittering horizontally even with a solid trigger (and the intensity for the A time-base but I'm pretty sure that is just a dirty pot). Also this may be unrelated as I don't know exactly what operating as intended is but one of the transistors on what I am fairly certain is the horizontal amp board can get very hot to the touch while the others stay cool when the machine has been running for over 10 minutes.
This is the transistor in question: /g/TekScopes/photo/252782/2?p=Created,,,20,2,0,0 . Haven't had the time to find where it lives on the circuit diagram


Re: Strange Tek2440 issue

 

Szabolcs, from here (TekScopes) posted a method of accessing the internal battery of the Dallas NVRAM modules using a heat gun and a scraper. The difference in these modules was that there were two batteries that were visible. Anyway I scraped down to pin 7 of the DS1210 and soldered a wire to it on each module. I ran those to a small circuit board where I had a battery holder and two diodes on it. The diodes fed the voltage to each of the modules.

When I put it back together it didn't work. Then I noticed I forgot to plug in one of the ribbon cables!

Anyway, the subject for the post I mentioned above is:

Easy method for NVRAM battery replacement

Vince.

On 08/30/2020 05:53 PM, Bob Albert via groups.io wrote:
Not your current problem but I replaced the NVRAM chips in my 2440 and the scope doesn't work. I switched one of them back and still no joy. I will try the other one.
I probably got some counterfeit modules from China. I am hoping it will be fixed when I put the old one back. How did you fix yours?
Bob
On Sunday, August 30, 2020, 02:37:52 PM PDT, Vince Vielhaber <vev@...> wrote:


I picked up a 2440 on ebay that had the dead nvram battery problem. Got
that fixed up with an external battery. Ran thru the self cal and ext
cal and all seems fine, except when the sweep rate is turned above 100
or 200 ns.

In trying to research this a bit, the only thing I could find was on one
of the Tek forums back in 2017 but there were zero responses. Here is
how the other person described the problem:

---------------------------------------------------------------------
The 5 volt regulated rail is getting crowbared when the scope Sec/Div is
set to 100ns or faster. If save is pressed at a slower setting the
Sec/Div can then be set to any value without the 5 Volt rail getting
pulled down. It appears the issue only occurs during an active
acquisition cycle at 100ns Sec/Div or faster.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

While I didn't measure the 5v rail, the screen shrinks a couple of times
as the waveform changes, the inputs get switched to GND and the display
goes blank. Sometimes, if I'm quick enough, I can turn the sweep back
down (1us or slower) and it'll recover, but I still have to go to the
input coupling and switch the inputs off of GND.

Anyone seen this or have any ideas what's going on?

Thanks!
Vince.
--
K8ZW


Re: Strange Tek2440 issue

Bob Albert
 

Not your current problem but I replaced the NVRAM chips in my 2440 and the scope doesn't work.? I switched one of them back and still no joy.? I will try the other one.
I probably got some counterfeit modules from China.? I am hoping it will be fixed when I put the old one back.? ?How did you fix yours?
Bob

On Sunday, August 30, 2020, 02:37:52 PM PDT, Vince Vielhaber <vev@...> wrote:


I picked up a 2440 on ebay that had the dead nvram battery problem.? Got
that fixed up with an external battery.? Ran thru the self cal and ext
cal and all seems fine, except when the sweep rate is turned above 100
or 200 ns.

In trying to research this a bit, the only thing I could find was on one
of the Tek forums back in 2017 but there were zero responses.? Here is
how the other person described the problem:

---------------------------------------------------------------------
The 5 volt regulated rail is getting crowbared when the scope Sec/Div is
set to 100ns or faster. If save is pressed at a slower setting the
Sec/Div can then be set to any value without the 5 Volt rail getting
pulled down. It appears the issue only occurs during an active
acquisition cycle at 100ns Sec/Div or faster.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

While I didn't measure the 5v rail, the screen shrinks a couple of times
as the waveform changes, the inputs get switched to GND and the display
goes blank.? Sometimes, if I'm quick enough, I can turn the sweep back
down (1us or slower) and it'll recover, but I still have to go to the
input coupling and switch the inputs off of GND.

Anyone seen this or have any ideas what's going on?

Thanks!
Vince.
--
? K8ZW? ?