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Re: Hello World...
Michael Dunn
Hiya. :)
Sometime on Fri, 29 Sep 2000, you wrote: The link works precisely as typed....Hmmm... vewwy stwange... might be my end, but I can't imagine why. I was able to get into the uni server the "front" way, but when I clicked on *some* links, I got the same message while attempting redirection to ancillary servers. My guess is the university webmaster doesn't like Aussies... (I used to be a university webmaster, and I know it's quite feasible to deny service selectively this way, but I can't imagine why.) Oh well... Cheers, :) Michael -- Michael VK2XMD 0404-478-205 I used to have a handle on life, but it broke ... |
Re: Fans
Stan or Patricia Griffiths
Michael Dunn wrote:
At 8:57 PM +1100 2000/9/28, Michael Dunn wrote:Here is an excerpt from the "new" book I am writing. I have been working onAh, I remember repacking many, many fan motors.... <g>Tell us more please! The fans on our 549s don't work too well - it for several years. APPENDIX 8 FAN MOTOR REBUILD PROCEDURE Not all fan motors found in Tek instruments can be easily rebuilt nor do they need it. The fan motors typically found in the 530/540/550 scopes with 1/4 inch shafts are the ones that this procedure works for. The same basic motor is also found in the 502 but it looks different because it has an extra metal shield around it. Inside the shield, it looks the same as the others. 1. Inspect the motor wires for breaks in insulation. The insulation tends to harden over time and flake off of the wires. You may want to replace the wires at this point by splicing them where they enter the motor windings. At least you are warned to be very careful with them if the insulation is brittle. 2. Remove the fan motor from the instrument and mark the ceramic strip notches so you can return motor wires to the correct place. It has also been suggested that cutting the motor wires just below the motor and installing quick disconnect connectors will make the job of cleaning the motor easier when it has to be done again in the future. 3. Disassemble the motor noting that the oil holes in the bearing pieces point up and to the right side when you are facing the back of the instrument. Also note that the wires exit the motor from the bottom and toward the interior of the instrument. Make sketches so you can get it back together correctly. There are several wrong ways to reassemble it. 4. Disassemble the motor by removing the bolts holding it together and remove all of the old bearing washers including the fiber washers. Very carefully remove the tight-fitting washer on the shaft near the fan blade since you will need to reinstall this one later and I have not seen a source for replacements. 5. Clean all of the old and solidified oil from around the shaft and the area of the oil reservoirs in both bearing pieces. Mineral spirits work well to dissolve the old oil and a rag soaked in mineral spirits works well to wipe the windings and front and rear housings clean of dirt and old oil. For especially bad cases, you might actually soak the end housings in mineral spirits for a day, rinse well, blow out all the excess solvent, and let them dry for a day before reassembly and re-oiling. 6. Put new oil in the reservoirs and place a small amount directly on the shaft where it enters the bearing pieces. Do not overfill the reservoirs but do saturate the fiber reservoir filler with oil. Use any medium weight quality motor oil. Light mineral oil used to lubricate air conditioning and heating system blowers works well since it does not change viscosity much as the temperature changes. 7. Put nylon washers on both ends of the shaft such that the shaft has about 1/32 to 1/64 inch of end play when the motor is fully reassembled (and the bolts are tight) and the rotating part of the motor is centered in the field. You may need different washers on the front and back to achieve this and you may not need all of the washers provided. (Tek used to sell a kit to do this. Sorry, not available now.) This is a "trial and error" process which may require assembly and disassembly of the motor several times to get the correct end play. You can find a good assortment of 1/4" nylon washers in various thicknesses at a well stocked hardware store. 8. Install the fiber washer that fits tightly on the shaft between the motor and the fan blade to prevent oil from traveling down the shaft to the fan blade where it will be thrown around the interior of the instrument. Motors that tend to run slow almost always do not turn freely and this is almost always due to the bearings being gummed up. Sometimes motors will start slow and speed up after a few minutes. This indicates that a rebuild is needed. * * * * * I have used this procedure hundreds of times and successfully fixed many "slow" motors. Stan w7ni@... |
Re: Fans & special tubes
Michael Dunn
At 6:15 PM -0700 2000/9/29, Stan or Patricia Griffiths wrote:
Here is an excerpt from the "new" book I am writing. I have been working onGreat stuff Stan! Obviously, a motor rebuilding party is in order here. What is this book of which you speak? p.s., A few tubes in various scopes have Tek labels on them, and the manual points out that they are specially selected parts. Does anyone know what the selection criteria was? I'm guessing it might vary in different applications...? Xconductance here, HV there, matching...??? ----------------------------------------------------------------- Michael Dunn | Surround Sound Decoder & Stereo Enhancement Cantares | Self-Amplified Speakers, Test Equipment 74 George St. | Ambisonic Surround Sound CDs and Recording Waterloo, Ont. | (519) 744-9395 (fax: 744-7129) N2J 1K7 | mdunn@... Canada | ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
Re: Hello World...
Stan or Patricia Griffiths
Hi Michael,
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I may be all wet here but I think your server has to know about the URL you wish to go to or it won't let you go there. Maybe your server just does not recognize the web address you are trying to reach. As I understand it, when a new URL comes on board, the owner has to let the world (internet) know about it so the various servers of the world can recongnize and find it. The servers are constantly updating their database of valid URL's and maybe the one you are looking for never got into your server's database. If not, your server could not find it, but others still could . . . But I may be completely off base on this one. It makes sense to me . . . Stan w7ni@... Michael Dunn wrote: Hiya. :) |
Re: Fans & special tubes
Stan or Patricia Griffiths
HI Michael,
I already wrote one book about Tek scopes: "OSCILLOSCOPES--Selecting and Restoring a Classic". There is more about this on the web page at <>. My first book, published in 1992, covered Tek scopes and plugins from 1947 (the beginning) to the end of 1969. The second volume (under construction for several years now) will cover the scopes and plugins introduced by Tek in the decade of the 70's. I still have a couple of hundred copies of the first book if you find it interesting after you read the review of it on the web page. Tube with part numbers beginning with "157-" are checked for various parameters. Some are matched for gm. Some are checked for grid current or microphonics. There are other parameters they are checked for as well. And, yes, I almost hate to say it, I know what those parameters are. The reason I hate to say it is that if it were generally known that I know this stuff, I would be buried under requests for the info . . . I just don't have the time to handle the requests. The plan was to publish a database with checked tube part numbers and the parameters they are checked for but so far, there just has not been time to do it. Believe it or not, there are a couple of other even more important databases to publish if we have time for them, like a cross reference from "152-" (diode) part numbers to generic (1N) diode numbers. There are also checked transistors and diodes ("153-") part numbers and we could do a database on those too. There is literally TONS of good data to be published. I could very easily spend the rest of my life doing this . . . and that is not really a bad idea as I am sure there are a lot of guys and gals out there who would appreciate and use the data. So . . . if you need some specific data about one particular "157" part number, I might find the time to look it up for you . . . let me know. Stan w7ni@... |
Re: Hello World...
Michael
Hiya Stan, :)
Sometime on Sun, 01 Oct 2000, you wrote: I may be all wet here but I think your server has to know about the URL you wish toHmmm... I'm not prepared to say you're wrong, but I'm not certain you're right either. I just don't really know. Either way, it's a pity, as I'd like to see the site. Oh well... Never mind. Cheers, :) Michael |
Re: Fans & special tubes
Michael
Sometime on Sun, 01 Oct 2000, you wrote:
I already wrote one book about Tek scopes: "OSCILLOSCOPES--Selecting andThat's one book I will be ordering, when I can afford it. (and when the $A/$US exchange rate is a little more favourable...) Cheers, :) Michael |
Re: Hello World...
Michael
Hi again all... :)
Sometime on Mon, 02 Oct 2000, you wrote: margo.student.utwente.nl has the IP address 130.89.221.72FOUND IT!!! Thanks for that. Looks like it was a nameserver problem after all... Great pages, but I take issue with your comment that the 453 "doesn't belong in the list of the great tek scopes..." The 453 was my scope of choice as soon as I could get my hands on it! And the first thing I did was throw away the mesh filter and fit a blue one. Lovely! :) In my mind, the 453 is the "classic portable" oscilloscope. Cheers, :) Michael |
Re: Hello World...
Stan or Patricia Griffiths
I was there when the 453 was introduced to the world. No doubt about it . . . it
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was revolutionary. You have to put it in the context of the other instruments available on the market at the time. Nothing could touch it. IBM was certainly in love with it . . . Stan w7ni@... Michael wrote: Hi again all... :) |
453
Arnoud van der Wel
About the 453....
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'Great' is said with a wink to size and weight... The 453 is not a 'great' scope. :) Secondly, I specifically did not want to include transistorized Tek scopes in the museum because the interest in those is even larger than the interest in the tube scopes. Doing a question-and-answer session with all the thousands of happy users of 5000, 7000, 453, 454, 465, 475, 485 users around the world is not what I set out to do... But of course.... If I had a 453, it would not be for sale... :) Regards, Arnoud. -----Original Message----- |
Re: 453
Michael
Hello, :)
Sometime on Mon, 02 Oct 2000, you wrote: And in my mind the 485 would have to be a classic also... Now if there's any thing I'd like *more* than a 453, it would be a 485. All the style of the 453, and 350MHz! Yes! But of course.... If I had a 453, it would not be for sale... :)I second that. But I don't think I've ever seen one for sale... I wanted to buy the one I was working with, and Peter wouldn't sell it to me... >sigh<. Cheers, :) Michael |
Re: 453
Michael
Sometime on Tue, 03 Oct 2000, I wrote:
I second that. But I don't think I've ever seen one for sale... I wanted to...And having just said that, I just found one at: --- $200. No, I'm not going for it, with the echange rate what it is. Cheers, :) Michael |
Tek parts, tubes, etc.
walter shawlee
hi,
we have a lot of tek parts and tubes, CRT's etc. for 5000/7000 and some 400 series units. you can browse through what's sorted and on line at: To help with repairs, there is also a CRT cross reference, and tek part number to JEDEC cross reference for many 1N/2N and IC parts. In the tube section, we do have some tek special tubes, selected by whatever mysterious criteria they thought was important, as well as some commonly needed Tek tubes like 7119's etc. for the generators, and some nuvistors for the older 400 series scopes. sadly, we can't be much help with older tube 500 series scopes, except for CRT's and some miniature HV rectifier tubes, and 6080's. we also have the tek cross reference data to 1984 for semis, and can help with some items not listed on oline for cross-reference data, but these requests are done as we have time, so be patient. In the NEW ARRIVALS section, we also just got dozens of Tek precision capacitor kits for time bases and generators, if you need them. I will add a link to this mail list into the Tek section later this month as well. Anybody in Canada may also be interested in the fact we will be moving shortly, and will have a lot of older Tek scrap we have to get rid of. shipping is reasonable within Canada for that kind of stuff, so might be useful to somebody. all the best, walter walter2@... |
Tube(s) needed
Michael Dunn
Hi. Does anyone have any 8608 tubes? (med power pentodes with plate cap, used for vertical deflection on some Tek scopes (eg, 556, 549))
I'm willing to pay a reasonable amount for 1 or several, but not an exorbitant price. ----------------------------------------------------------------- Michael Dunn | Surround Sound Decoder & Stereo Enhancement Cantares | Self-Amplified Speakers, Test Equipment 74 George St. | Ambisonic Surround Sound CDs and Recording Waterloo, Ont. | (519) 744-9395 (fax: 744-7129) N2J 1K7 | mdunn@... Canada | ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
Re: Parts needed
Michael
Hi all,
I have just taken delivery of a 7603, and in transit, the intensity/readout controls were damaged. It needs a new ganged pot and concentric knobs. Can anyone recommend a supplier who takes Amex? Thanks and regards, :) Michael -- Michael VK2XMD 0404-478-205 I used to have a handle on life, but it broke ... |
Re: 453
Stan or Patricia Griffiths
Michael wrote:
Hello, :)If you really want a 453, you can find them for sale of eBay and in various classified ads for used test equipment. Not everything on eBay sells for outrageous prices . . . Stan w7ni@... |
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