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Info: 564B found FS in Wollongong, Australia

Michael
 

To whom it may concern ,and for what it's worth, I found a 564B scope for
sale in the "Cash-Mart" second-hand shop in Wollongong a couple of days ago.
They were asking $165 for it. I don't remember what plugins were in it, but
I established that it powered up and displayed a trace or two, and the
timebase and vertical amps seemed to be working. I didn't have the asking
price, or I might have bought it myself. It's relatively undamaged but a
bit grubby - should clean up okay.

Might be of interest to someone.

Email me if you need more info.

(BTW, I have NO connection with the store concerned...)

Regards,
Michael


Re: WTD: 7704A Power Supply

 

"....It is a long time since I used a 4-bay Tek scope, but I recall that the
readout vibrated up and down a little too (it was either a 7704 or a 7904 - I
forget which now)...."

Craig
---------------
It seems the on screen readout, while a brilliant feature, is never quite
perfect. For instance, the character focus and/or astig never seems to be
quite sharp, and it varies depending on screen location in some models. Part
of the wonderful character of the scopes I suppose.

Don


Re: WTD: 7704A Power Supply

Lynn Lewis
 

Okay, guys. Here's the deal. I have the 7704A working but I need some
advice. Slot 1 is unusable and slot 3 is unreliable. All the switches and
controls have been cleaned and work smoothly. All the panel lights work.
Go here to see the scope:


Is there a way to repair the slots? I can either try to repair them or else
I can break the scope down into parts and sell the parts. Dick already wants
a power supply. Does anyone else need any boards? Except for the slots, you
can see that the scope works. The readouts have a slight ripple so there's
probably a weak filter cap somewhere but it's not bad and it doesn't show up
on the trace. I would be happier with a more focused trace but it's not as
bad as
it appears in the photos.

Fix it? Or, break it down? What do you think?

-----Original Message-----
From: w1ksz [mailto:w1ksz@...]
Sent: Wednesday, January 16, 2002 5:23 PM
To: TekScopes@...
Subject: [TekScopes] WTD: 7704A Power Supply


I have a very clean 7704A with a sick Power Supply. Anyone have one
they will part with ?

Thanks, Dick, W1KSZ


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Re: WTD: 7704A Power Supply

 

My 2 cents:

Sounds like you're so close now to having it fixed, I would think you'd want
to take the last steps. You've narrowed it down to cracked or missing
backplane connector shells. This is definitely why slot one is dead, and my
guess is you also have one shell fractured in slot 3. My recollection is
that these contact tensioning covers are nylon, snap fit into place, and
become yellow and brittle over time. I would try to get replacements from
anyone currently selling Tek parts: Sphere Research, Surplus Sales, Deane
Kidd, plus the couple guys who keep showing up on ebay with new Tek parts. I
can't recollect the names off hand--one is local here in Aloha OR I think and
the other is in Canada. When the latter puts parts up on ebay, he puts up a
couple dozen at a time so you can't miss him. I find them with my daily
search for "Tektronix new". Only if that didn't pan out, would I scrap the
mainframe (unless there is more wrong than I know).

I remember I had a 7704A while at Tek many moons ago and the readout shimmied
a bit on that also (and it was near new at the time). I wonder if that isn't
a normal trait. I also remember having to replace those nylon shells a few
times back then.

Good luck either way,

Don


Re: Using a 7A16P in a 7904 mainframe

Lynn Lewis
 

If it works and If the shipping is low and If you can trust the seller, --
it's a good price.

-----Original Message-----
From: JOSE V. GAVILA (EB5AGV/EC5AAU) [mailto:eb5agv@...]
Sent: Thursday, January 17, 2002 1:52 AM
To: TekScopes@...
Subject: [TekScopes] Using a 7A16P in a 7904 mainframe


Hello!

I wonder if the above mentioned combination will work fine. I have been
offered a curious (to me at least!) setup: 7904 + 7A16P + 7B92. It has
some
trouble with signals over 100MHz (it seems a timebase trouble, as with
another 7B92, it works fine, seller says). Price is $100. What do you
think?

Regards,

JOSE
----------------------------------------------------------------------
73 EB5AGV / EC5AAU - JOSE V. GAVILA
La Canyada - Valencia (SPAIN)

EB5AGV Vintage Radio Site:

European Boatanchors List:

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Using a 7A16P in a 7904 mainframe

JOSE V. GAVILA (EB5AGV/EC5AAU)
 

Hello!

I wonder if the above mentioned combination will work fine. I have been
offered a curious (to me at least!) setup: 7904 + 7A16P + 7B92. It has some
trouble with signals over 100MHz (it seems a timebase trouble, as with
another 7B92, it works fine, seller says). Price is $100. What do you think?

Regards,

JOSE
----------------------------------------------------------------------
73 EB5AGV / EC5AAU - JOSE V. GAVILA
La Canyada - Valencia (SPAIN)

EB5AGV Vintage Radio Site:

European Boatanchors List:


Re: Digitizer on eBay

Lynn Lewis
 

Stan
I forget to look for a part number. What you said sounds right to me. I like
the idea of a coaxial relay. Are they used in anything else? I'll probably
be asking about pinouts later. Thanks.

Dick,
I solved my power supply problem, except it wasn't actually the power
supply. One of the cables going to the calibration board was plugged in
backward (P10D, I think). They symptoms were, nothing worked except the
little bulb in the power supply (??19). You could here it going tik, tik,
tik but the graticule lights didn't even come on.
I got pretty intimate with the schematic but I'm afraid you didn't give me
much to go on. By the way, with mine, the 5 volt supply was also less than a
volt.

More to come.

-----Original Message-----
From: Stan or Patricia Griffiths [mailto:w7ni@...]
Sent: Thursday, January 17, 2002 12:46 AM
To: TekScopes@...
Subject: Re: [TekScopes] Digitizer on eBay


Hi Lynn,

After taking a look at the eBay pictures, I have to admit that in my 26+
years
at Tek, I have never seen this thing. Tek made a lot of LARGE systems of
7912's
(digitizers, like we have been discussing here) for the military. I think
many
of those systems have been broken down into pieces for sale on the surplus
market. This looks like one of the pieces of such a system for routing
standard
signals to the individual 7912's (or maybe 7612's) to verify system
performance
prior to using the system to gather data during a test. No doubt, there
are
many coaxial relays inside the box and the two blue connectors are used to
control the opening and closing of those relays for routing signals. Most
of
these types of equipment never appeared in any catalog since they were
custom-made in very low quantities.

Stan
w7ni@...

Lynn Lewis wrote:

> I've decided to pass on the digitizer. I've bought enough "toys" already
> (toy=something to take apart to see if there is anything useful in it),
> including an HP1630D. Right now, I have a 7704A scattered across my
> workbench.
>
> I've always worried about those EMPs. I've though about adding ferrous
> shielding around my hard drive in case a nuke hit close by <:-)
>
> Here is the link to the Auto-Cal Steering Unit on ebay:
>

> 720
> I'll check for a part number when I get back to the office later today.
>
> It's made by Tektronix. It's rack mounted but no hinged door. It has a
> multitude of BNC connectors. Inside (besides lots of room, which I find
> unusual for Tektronix) there is a horizontal metal partition between the
top
> section and the bottom section to which the circuit boards are attached,
> also horizontally. On the bottom of the partition is a (well made, easy
to
> get to) power supply that provides +5, +15, -15, and -5.2vdc. The other
> boards are on top of the partition. Most of the cables from the BNC
> connectors go to a board with a bunch of flat "relays". Each relay has
one
> input and (I forget) maybe 4 outputs. It's purpose is obviously to
"steer"
> a signal from one input to one of several outputs, depending on
instructions
> sent by the other (logic?) boards. The logic boards apparently attached
to
> something via the centronics like connectors and that something
determined
> the "route" of the signal. I'm thinking that it may have routed several
> calibration devices to an output so that once hooked up, you could
change
> inputs automatically without having to unplug and replug cables all the
> time. In any case, it's a very nice box but I'm going to explore it a
while
> before I decide whether to gut it or not.
>
> Lynn





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Re: Digitizer on eBay

Stan or Patricia Griffiths
 

Hi Lynn,

After taking a look at the eBay pictures, I have to admit that in my 26+ years
at Tek, I have never seen this thing. Tek made a lot of LARGE systems of 7912's
(digitizers, like we have been discussing here) for the military. I think many
of those systems have been broken down into pieces for sale on the surplus
market. This looks like one of the pieces of such a system for routing standard
signals to the individual 7912's (or maybe 7612's) to verify system performance
prior to using the system to gather data during a test. No doubt, there are
many coaxial relays inside the box and the two blue connectors are used to
control the opening and closing of those relays for routing signals. Most of
these types of equipment never appeared in any catalog since they were
custom-made in very low quantities.

Stan
w7ni@...

Lynn Lewis wrote:

I've decided to pass on the digitizer. I've bought enough "toys" already
(toy=something to take apart to see if there is anything useful in it),
including an HP1630D. Right now, I have a 7704A scattered across my
workbench.

I've always worried about those EMPs. I've though about adding ferrous
shielding around my hard drive in case a nuke hit close by <:-)

Here is the link to the Auto-Cal Steering Unit on ebay:

720
I'll check for a part number when I get back to the office later today.

It's made by Tektronix. It's rack mounted but no hinged door. It has a
multitude of BNC connectors. Inside (besides lots of room, which I find
unusual for Tektronix) there is a horizontal metal partition between the top
section and the bottom section to which the circuit boards are attached,
also horizontally. On the bottom of the partition is a (well made, easy to
get to) power supply that provides +5, +15, -15, and -5.2vdc. The other
boards are on top of the partition. Most of the cables from the BNC
connectors go to a board with a bunch of flat "relays". Each relay has one
input and (I forget) maybe 4 outputs. It's purpose is obviously to "steer"
a signal from one input to one of several outputs, depending on instructions
sent by the other (logic?) boards. The logic boards apparently attached to
something via the centronics like connectors and that something determined
the "route" of the signal. I'm thinking that it may have routed several
calibration devices to an output so that once hooked up, you could change
inputs automatically without having to unplug and replug cables all the
time. In any case, it's a very nice box but I'm going to explore it a while
before I decide whether to gut it or not.

Lynn


Re: WTD: 7704A Power Supply

Lynn Lewis
 

I'm going to be doing some 7704A power supply troubleshooting this evening
myself. If you'll tell me everything you know about your problem, I'll keep
it in mind while I'm working (or while its fresh on my mind, anyway). Maybe
we'll get lucky.

-----Original Message-----
From: w1ksz [mailto:w1ksz@...]
Sent: Wednesday, January 16, 2002 5:23 PM
To: TekScopes@...
Subject: [TekScopes] WTD: 7704A Power Supply


I have a very clean 7704A with a sick Power Supply. Anyone have one
they will part with ?

Thanks, Dick, W1KSZ


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WTD: 7704A Power Supply

w1ksz
 

I have a very clean 7704A with a sick Power Supply. Anyone have one
they will part with ?

Thanks, Dick, W1KSZ


cables

Lynn Lewis
 

I learned to use an oscilloscope in Tech School at Lowry AFB in 1966. The
next time I used one was last December - over 35 years later. You forget a
lot in 35 years.
I have scopes. I have probes. I have a frequency counter and I have a
function generator. I have 52 ohm coax and I can crimp BNC connectors.

Anyway, to the point. On a 7904: when I ran a short cable from a T on "VERT
input" to "TRIGGER in" while looking at the 1KHz square wave, the square
wave wasn't square anymore. It occurs to me that I need to make myself some
auxiliary cables (BNC to BNC, BNC to alligator, etc.) to connection various
things in the most useful way. I would welcome suggestions for designing and
building a variety of such cables. What do you guys use???


Tek DC 510 module fault

petes7457
 

Hi,

I recently purchased a DC 510 module which works fine except for an
occassional tendancy to go haywire displaying random garbage and only
intermittently displaying the correct value. When the unit exhibits
this fault the self test routine returns error (?) numbers 330, 331,
332 or 333. I'm only driving channel A at present.

Does anyone have access to a manual or suggest where to start looking
to localise and correct this fault?

Kind regards,

Pete


Re: Digitizer on eBay

Lynn Lewis
 

I've decided to pass on the digitizer. I've bought enough "toys" already
(toy=something to take apart to see if there is anything useful in it),
including an HP1630D. Right now, I have a 7704A scattered across my
workbench.

I've always worried about those EMPs. I've though about adding ferrous
shielding around my hard drive in case a nuke hit close by <:-)

Here is the link to the Auto-Cal Steering Unit on ebay:

720
I'll check for a part number when I get back to the office later today.

It's made by Tektronix. It's rack mounted but no hinged door. It has a
multitude of BNC connectors. Inside (besides lots of room, which I find
unusual for Tektronix) there is a horizontal metal partition between the top
section and the bottom section to which the circuit boards are attached,
also horizontally. On the bottom of the partition is a (well made, easy to
get to) power supply that provides +5, +15, -15, and -5.2vdc. The other
boards are on top of the partition. Most of the cables from the BNC
connectors go to a board with a bunch of flat "relays". Each relay has one
input and (I forget) maybe 4 outputs. It's purpose is obviously to "steer"
a signal from one input to one of several outputs, depending on instructions
sent by the other (logic?) boards. The logic boards apparently attached to
something via the centronics like connectors and that something determined
the "route" of the signal. I'm thinking that it may have routed several
calibration devices to an output so that once hooked up, you could change
inputs automatically without having to unplug and replug cables all the
time. In any case, it's a very nice box but I'm going to explore it a while
before I decide whether to gut it or not.

Lynn

-----Original Message-----
From: Stan or Patricia Griffiths [mailto:w7ni@...]
Sent: Wednesday, January 16, 2002 12:43 AM
To: TekScopes@...
Subject: Re: [TekScopes] Digitizer on eBay


Lynn,

If you are talking about the 7912, it is good for making extemely fast,
single-shot measurements. Very handy for things like nuclear explosions .
. .
when you need to catch the EMP on your screen.

Is this "Auto-Cal Steering Unit" a Tektronix item? Does it have anything
like
a Tek part number on it? Is it a rackmounted item with a hinged door on
the
front?

Stan
w7ni@...

Lynn Lewis wrote:

> I guess that conversation took place before I joined. Could someone tell
> me - briefly - what the digitizer is good for? And what else would one
need
> to go with it to make it useful?
>
> P.S. I recently bought a box called an Auto-Cal Steering Unit. I
actually
> bought it for the box ($5 + S&H)
> but now that I've looked inside, I find it intriguing. I'm especially
> curious as to what connects to the two
> centronics-like connectors on the back. Any background would be
> appreciated.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Craig Sawyers [mailto:c.sawyers@...]
> Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2002 2:57 AM
> To: TekScopes@...
> Subject: [TekScopes] Digitizer on eBay
>
> Hi
>
> A heads-up for anyone wanting a 7912 digitizer that we were discussing
on
> the list a few days ago. There is one listed on eBay, item 1690813203
> with
> a $19.99 start bid. It weighs 70lb, so it is not one for me -
shipping
> costs to the UK would be astronomical.
>
> Craig
>
> Yahoo! Groups Sponsor
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>
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>
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>
>
>
>
> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
> TekScopes-unsubscribe@...
>
>
>
> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to



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Re: Digitizer on eBay

Don Black
 

Once I had a little problem with my septic tank (sewerage system) and needed to get
some air into it. I went to the local pet shop and bought a fish tank pump that did
the job just fine.
However, they also had a special; a free gold fish with every purchase.
Terrific.
Then of course, I needed a tank, filter, gravel, underwater toys and Doo Dads. I
already had the pump (when not otherwise in use, it had two outlets anyway).
So after getting all the accessories all was well, with fishy happily swimming round
in his new home, until one day he went to the great fish tank in the sky.
A friend finally got the tank, etc.
Now if I go to buy a reel of solder and the day's special is a Tek. Digitizer, well
perhaps I'll just pass it up.
Still, if ever I need to conduct any underground tests?
I know how you feel Dieter. At least you won't have to buy a manual for the next one.
Cheers, Don Black.


Dieter Teuchert wrote:

Hi,
here is some hands-on experience with buying a 7912AD at ebay:

Half a year ago i got a 7912AD at ebay for US $ 50. It was shipped from US to
Germany by USPS surface for about US $ 90. When it arrived it was in good shape,
though the processor hang on powerup self tests. Anyway it is a really interesting
device: Its circuits are about 3 times more complex than a normal 7000 scope. It
has everything inside that was high-tec in the 80s, from ECL to AM2900 bit slice
processor. Its modular switched 350 W power supply must have been a shock for Tek
competitors (appears to be prototype of modern PC power supplies).

So i decided to buy service manuals and fix it. This was another US $ 300 + about
20 hours of work. In addition i bought a programmable amplifier 7A16P and a
programmable time base 7B90P for about US $ 120 + shipping. Later i noticed, that
7A16P is the proper amplifier for a 7612 digitizer and i needed a 7A29P instead.
That one i got for another US $ 170 + shipping. You also need a black and white TV
monitor to do adjustments.

So you see: Owning such a device is not for the fainthearted and the impression
you get, when somebody buys something cheap at ebay may be completely misleading.
For me the total was about $ 1000.

You also see: For an educated engineer a 7912AD is still maintainable. Now i have
a scope that dumps its electron beam into a semiconductor target of about 1" by
1". The target serves as realtime storage and is read out by a second beam in
three different modes:
- TV scanning
- xy intensity scanning
- xy intensity scanning with analog to digital conversion, storage and data
transfer via HPIB.

The images i get are perfect, including a grid written by the beam! Bandwith is
about 500 MHz. The sampling rate equivalent to the risetime of about 0.6 ns would
be 1.6 Gs/s.
Now the drawback: it does only about 512 samples total! This is why everybody
wants to have one of these modern digital storage scopes with megabytes of memory
and why the concept of 7912AD is history.

Anyway, for applications where the small number of samples doesn't matter, a
7912AD still competes with modern $ n0 000 scopes. This is in the area of
scientific measurements, where you know when you expect an interesting event to
happen, so you can catch it inside your 512 samples record. In the world of
digital communications a 7912AD gets lost and you better buy a used TDS scope for
the same price.

Owning such a superb device as a private person may be an interesting experience,
especially for a true Tek freak. I bought another one in the meantime.. mmm,
because each one has only one input channel!

Best regards
Dieter Teuchert



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Tektronix 7612D users?

JOSE V. GAVILA (EB5AGV/EC5AAU)
 

Hello!

I wonder if anybody uses that digitizer... If so, what do you think of it?

Best regards,

JOSE
----------------------------------------------------------------------
73 EB5AGV / EC5AAU - JOSE V. GAVILA
La Canyada - Valencia (SPAIN)

EB5AGV Vintage Radio Site:

European Boatanchors List:


Re: Digitizer on eBay

 

Hi,
here is some hands-on experience with buying a 7912AD at ebay:

Half a year ago i got a 7912AD at ebay for US $ 50. It was shipped from US to
Germany by USPS surface for about US $ 90. When it arrived it was in good shape,
though the processor hang on powerup self tests. Anyway it is a really interesting
device: Its circuits are about 3 times more complex than a normal 7000 scope. It
has everything inside that was high-tec in the 80s, from ECL to AM2900 bit slice
processor. Its modular switched 350 W power supply must have been a shock for Tek
competitors (appears to be prototype of modern PC power supplies).

So i decided to buy service manuals and fix it. This was another US $ 300 + about
20 hours of work. In addition i bought a programmable amplifier 7A16P and a
programmable time base 7B90P for about US $ 120 + shipping. Later i noticed, that
7A16P is the proper amplifier for a 7612 digitizer and i needed a 7A29P instead.
That one i got for another US $ 170 + shipping. You also need a black and white TV
monitor to do adjustments.

So you see: Owning such a device is not for the fainthearted and the impression
you get, when somebody buys something cheap at ebay may be completely misleading.
For me the total was about $ 1000.

You also see: For an educated engineer a 7912AD is still maintainable. Now i have
a scope that dumps its electron beam into a semiconductor target of about 1" by
1". The target serves as realtime storage and is read out by a second beam in
three different modes:
- TV scanning
- xy intensity scanning
- xy intensity scanning with analog to digital conversion, storage and data
transfer via HPIB.

The images i get are perfect, including a grid written by the beam! Bandwith is
about 500 MHz. The sampling rate equivalent to the risetime of about 0.6 ns would
be 1.6 Gs/s.
Now the drawback: it does only about 512 samples total! This is why everybody
wants to have one of these modern digital storage scopes with megabytes of memory
and why the concept of 7912AD is history.

Anyway, for applications where the small number of samples doesn't matter, a
7912AD still competes with modern $ n0 000 scopes. This is in the area of
scientific measurements, where you know when you expect an interesting event to
happen, so you can catch it inside your 512 samples record. In the world of
digital communications a 7912AD gets lost and you better buy a used TDS scope for
the same price.

Owning such a superb device as a private person may be an interesting experience,
especially for a true Tek freak. I bought another one in the meantime.. mmm,
because each one has only one input channel!

Best regards
Dieter Teuchert


Re: Digitizer on eBay

Stan or Patricia Griffiths
 

Lynn,

If you are talking about the 7912, it is good for making extemely fast,
single-shot measurements. Very handy for things like nuclear explosions . . .
when you need to catch the EMP on your screen.

Is this "Auto-Cal Steering Unit" a Tektronix item? Does it have anything like
a Tek part number on it? Is it a rackmounted item with a hinged door on the
front?

Stan
w7ni@...

Lynn Lewis wrote:

I guess that conversation took place before I joined. Could someone tell
me - briefly - what the digitizer is good for? And what else would one need
to go with it to make it useful?

P.S. I recently bought a box called an Auto-Cal Steering Unit. I actually
bought it for the box ($5 + S&H)
but now that I've looked inside, I find it intriguing. I'm especially
curious as to what connects to the two
centronics-like connectors on the back. Any background would be
appreciated.
-----Original Message-----
From: Craig Sawyers [mailto:c.sawyers@...]
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2002 2:57 AM
To: TekScopes@...
Subject: [TekScopes] Digitizer on eBay

Hi

A heads-up for anyone wanting a 7912 digitizer that we were discussing on
the list a few days ago. There is one listed on eBay, item 1690813203
with
a $19.99 start bid. It weighs 70lb, so it is not one for me - shipping
costs to the UK would be astronomical.

Craig

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Re: Digitizer on eBay

Lynn Lewis
 

I guess that conversation took place before I joined. Could someone tell
me - briefly - what the digitizer is good for? And what else would one need
to go with it to make it useful?

P.S. I recently bought a box called an Auto-Cal Steering Unit. I actually
bought it for the box ($5 + S&H)
but now that I've looked inside, I find it intriguing. I'm especially
curious as to what connects to the two
centronics-like connectors on the back. Any background would be
appreciated.

-----Original Message-----
From: Craig Sawyers [mailto:c.sawyers@...]
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2002 2:57 AM
To: TekScopes@...
Subject: [TekScopes] Digitizer on eBay


Hi

A heads-up for anyone wanting a 7912 digitizer that we were discussing on
the list a few days ago. There is one listed on eBay, item 1690813203
with
a $19.99 start bid. It weighs 70lb, so it is not one for me - shipping
costs to the UK would be astronomical.

Craig


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TekScopes-unsubscribe@...



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Digitizer on eBay

Craig Sawyers
 

Hi

A heads-up for anyone wanting a 7912 digitizer that we were discussing on
the list a few days ago. There is one listed on eBay, item 1690813203 with
a $19.99 start bid. It weighs 70lb, so it is not one for me - shipping
costs to the UK would be astronomical.

Craig


Re: Tek Disease

 

Oh, Micronta, you better Boonton up your coat before you lose your Heath.

10-4 and "Put the Hammarlund" good Bally,

Don

(oops, went too far again!)