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Re: Nice Document Site with Tek manuals; New to me
On Sat, May 30, 2020 at 10:14 PM, tgerbic wrote:
Hi Tony, Dennis, .et al.: Yes... I think I remember that... seeing the old site... and I've run across this newer? site many times... as a result of a DuckDuckGo search... but, I never trusted it because of the garish webpage layout... that IMO...is usually associated with a crude website exploit. There is a ton of exploit sites that always turn up when searching for manuals/pdfs. Best regards and wishes. Roy |
Re: In Defense of the 7A19
Well Hello Magnus!
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You have been very quiet for a long time. It is nice to hear from you. I hope all is well. Dennis -----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of magnustoelle via groups.io Sent: Saturday, May 30, 2020 12:28 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [TekScopes] In Defense of the 7A19 Good Day, thank you for this great write-up and insights! , Dennus!The key take-aways from this are still absolutely relevant today.Think of the ongoing overkill of announcements of useless or irrelevant features in the Smartphone industry today or 8k-resolution TVs with a screen size simply too big for the average EU house... And then a competitor comes up with an online store that simply works. Cheers, Magnus On Sat, May 30, 2020 at 01:18 AM, tek_547 wrote: All: I may not be a Electronics Genius, but I do know the "sales game". HP mocked TEK's "bells and whistles" because those were the most visible and attractive features, the ones that the engineering community (plus others) wanted and usually needed.. Competitive company's "Marketing Departments" almost always mock features that they really have no answer for, deflect and distract is the plan. Sales and Marketing are 90% BS and 10% knowledge. It would appear to me that TEK established the on screen readout first, probably because it was the most difficult to implement as it was "new technology". Bells and whistles sell products, generally much quicker than "technical specs". You can always "fix" bandwidth, triggers and all that other stuff. TEK laid the cornerstone for the 7K series and built from there, they were playing the "long" game; however they certainly knew they were behind at the time. HP had a technically superior product, but only for that instant in time. After that, as Dennis stated, HP played catch up or just stopped playing. For me personally, the HP scopes are just not attractive in their esthetics. No offense to those who like them, just my personal preference and opinion. I find that the earlier TEK scopes almost always had a more intuitive layout on their scopes and a more attractive panel design. In the categories of Esthetics and ergonomics, the devil is definitely in the details, TEK got it right most of the time. Either brand of scope is likely much more capable of performing than my poor old brain is in understanding. Great piece of information and history from Dennis, Thanks Again -- Michael Lynch Dardanelle, Arkansas -- Dennis Tillman W7pF TekScopes Moderator |
Re: Nice Document Site with Tek manuals; New to me
I got tired up cutting and pasting schematics and picked up a inkjet
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plotter/printer off of craigslist for $50. Now I can print things up to 36 inches wide. It really helps sometimes to blow things up a bit and tack them on the wall. Like everything I buy it did need a little work, but not all that much. You can use panorama software to stitch schematics back together, but it's something of a pain. I much prefer single scan schematics, they're much easier to manipulate. Paul On Sat, May 30, 2020 at 06:34:55PM -0700, tgerbic wrote:
--
Paul Amaranth, GCIH | Manchester MI, USA Aurora Group of Michigan, LLC | Security, Systems & Software paul@... | Unix/Linux - We don't do windows |
Re: In Defense of the 7A19
Hi Michael,
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Your insights about the sales game explains a great deal about the motivation within the marketing department that produced this ad. I think the marketing team that created it deserve an award for this ad for several reasons: * The written copy in the ad follows all of the well understood advertising principles by describing the features and benefits of their scopes that should be at the top of your mind when you purchase your next scope. * The ad never mentions the competition - there is only one company you should consider for your next scope and that is HP. * What they deserve an award for is the picture of the contraption with bells and whistles. Nobody would have stopped to read the copy in this ad if it wasn't for the picture. When the typical engineer turned the page and saw that thing he probably would have laughed and read the ad to see what it was about. * Another reason to reward the team that produced the ad is something else they did that is so subtle 99% of the people that saw the ad had no idea the headline and the picture were also intended as an insult to another company - Tektronix. Tek's success is due to their engineering excellence. Stable triggering is critically important for any scope. HP triggering was far superior to Tek's triggering. On-screen readout wasn't any good if you couldn't trigger at the right point on a signal. The hidden message in the ad, aimed squarely at Tek, was we have brilliant engineers and here is proof that we can design a better scope at a lower price than you can. HP was famous for its very broad line of instruments that all had excellent specifications. Oscilloscopes are another instrument HP would also like to be known for. Unlike HP, Tek had a very narrow line of instruments and all of them were scopes of one kind or another. If HP could build a better scope at a lower price than Tek they were a very real threat. Even worse, HPs laboratory scope outdid the newest and broadest laboratory scope product line that the best minds at Tek could conceive. This was a huge accomplishment for HP. Companies spend a lot of money annually for oscilloscopes and HP was now a serious contender for Tek's most lucrative product line - their laboratory scopes The headline and photo in the ad was intended to send a message specifically to the management at Tek that HP intended to compete against them with a provably better scope at a lower price that Tek's newest and best lab scopes. Dennis Tillman W7pF -----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Michael W. Lynch via groups.io Sent: Saturday, May 30, 2020 8:57 AM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [TekScopes] In Defense of the 7A19 On Sat, May 30, 2020 at 01:18 AM, tek_547 wrote: All: I may not be a Electronics Genius, but I do know the "sales game". HP mocked TEK's "bells and whistles" because those were the most visible and attractive features, the ones that the engineering community (plus others) wanted and usually needed.. Competitive company's "Marketing Departments" almost always mock features that they really have no answer for, deflect and distract is the plan. Sales and Marketing are 90% BS and 10% knowledge. It would appear to me that TEK established the on screen readout first, probably because it was the most difficult to implement as it was "new technology". Bells and whistles sell products, generally much quicker than "technical specs". You can always "fix" bandwidth, triggers and all that other stuff. TEK laid the cornerstone for the 7K series and built from there, they were playing the "long" game; however they certainly knew they were behind at the time. HP had a technically superior product, but only for that instant in time. After that, as Dennis stated, HP played catch up or just stopped playing. For me personally, the HP scopes are just not attractive in their esthetics. No offense to those who like them, just my personal preference and opinion. I find that the earlier TEK scopes almost always had a more intuitive layout on their scopes and a more attractive panel design. In the categories of Esthetics and ergonomics, the devil is definitely in the details, TEK got it right most of the time. Either brand of scope is likely much more capable of performing than my poor old brain is in understanding. Great piece of information and history from Dennis, Thanks Again -- Michael Lynch Dardanelle, Arkansas -- Dennis Tillman W7pF TekScopes Moderator |
Re: Nice Document Site with Tek manuals; New to me
Dennis,
I checked my links and see I visited the opweb.de site in the past and they had a different link icon and page when I originally saved the link. Guess that site has been around for at least a decade. John, I do the same thing with wide pages. I have an HP printer that can print out to probably 54 inches in length but I am just too lazy (cheap) to buy long paper. I tape them up too. This has made me learn to scan wide schematics with the save area preselected and just move the paper. When I print out 11X17 sheets, they can just be taped together in a convenient spot. However, I do tend to take the board layouts and charts and enlarge them to be sure they are really clear, and image edit the photos and waveform photos to make the contrast so you can read them clearly. Berry, The HP scans were intended to put on the HP Archive site but in the end they were intended to be high quality scans, with OCR, to be used by people like us fixing old test equipment. So I guess they are in a good spot. This is true for any scans besides HP as well. I scan what I have and post in various places but there is still a lot of equipment out there with poor scans or no scans to be found. You should check out Artek Manuals if you can't find what you want on line. I have bought a few from the site and the prices are reasonable. Think about spending a week or month looking for a clean PDF verses spending about $8 to $12 to just get the manual and get back to troubleshooting. |
Re: Nice Document Site with Tek manuals; New to me
Stupid me.
I print them out and tape them together.? Sometimes this doesn't work too well because the scans are not all the same scale.? The print routine for our hp-Envy has a scaling function, which can save the day eventually when confronted with schematics are broken up where there are 30 runs which cross the joint between two scans which weren't done to same scale. |
TLA711 Benchtop controller schematic needed
Hi, everybody.
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I'm looking for a schematic for the Benchtop Controller module that goes in the TLA711 logic analyzer mainframe. The Benchtop Controller says "039-0039-03" on it, and I have the service manual for it, 070-9778-03, but it doesn't contain schematics for the boards. opweb.de didn't have it, nor did BAMA. Anybody have one of these? I'd pay for one; <$100, else I'll just get a TLA704 on ePray. Thanks. Jim Ford Laguna Hills, California U.S.A. ------ Original Message ------
From: "Dennis Tillman W7pF" <dennis@...> To: [email protected] Sent: 5/30/2020 5:03:19 PM Subject: [TekScopes] Nice Document Site with Tek manuals; New to me I just discovered a new (to me) source for documentation and I am scratching |
7854 ROM replacement issues
My 7584 is suffering with ROM failure, so I decided to buy some 2364 to 2764 adapter boards and fit 2764s instead; however, the adapter boards are too long and overlap the adjacent ROM sockets. Given that this seems to be a popular mod, how have people managed to fit 2764s on adapter boards?
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Re: Nice Document Site with Tek manuals; New to me
Hi Tony,
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The multipage scans are not exactly unuseful, but there is one for the 410C that is rather difficult to follow due to the number of lines that cross from one sheet to the next and seeing that on in a single sheet was rather nice. I was referring mostly to the sheets where there's a schematic, a drawing of the board, and perhaps a table that are rather a bit more convenient on the same page. You're correct, though, in that most folks don't have a home printer capable of much more than an 8.5" x 11" size so even if there are full size scans, it's pretty much necessary to view them on the computer as opposed to printing them out. I sure hope the work you did scanning manuals hasn't been used for some other purpose than it was intended. Thanks, Barry - N4BUQ ----- Original Message -----
From: "tgerbic" <tgerbic@...> |
Re: Nice Document Site with Tek manuals; New to me
I am not sure if I am happy or disappointed about this site. I did a spot check on the HP manuals ( I have a comprehensive list of over 100 I scanned and uploaded) and found that every one I checked are scans I did for the hparchive.com. The differences are that they have the acknowledgements removed, some front/back covers removed, and in some cases a little cosmetic work. Some have the color in the text removed. A good example is the HP 1704B Service or the 130B/BR.
I guess the upside is that the scans are being used, so they have some value. I have been scouring the web for 20 years looking for Tek, HP, Heathkit, and many other manuals and I cannot remember seeing this exact site with this navigation/color. It looks a bit like another that had similar content. It might have been there with a different web layout. Have to look back at my saved links. Interesting comment on full-sheet scans. I will often do full sheet if it will fit on my scanner (scans up to 11.7 x 16.5), or will do overlaping 16.5 scans if over that. Most people cannot print these out and they are a bit small on most monitors so I have gotten feedback to break these up. I provided the 410C alternative 1 and 2 manuals on the hparchive which are very clear but I did break up the schematics to make them large and legible. Are they unusable like that? /Tony |
Re: Nice Document Site with Tek manuals; New to me
Nice! That's a really great site. First time I've seen a freebie for an HP 410C where the full schematics and parts layouts are on full-sheet scans.
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Thanks, Barry - N4BUQ ----- Original Message -----
From: "Dennis Tillman W7pF" <dennis@...> |
Nice Document Site with Tek manuals; New to me
I just discovered a new (to me) source for documentation and I am scratching
my head wondering why it took me so long to stumble across it since he says his archive has been available since 2007 and it contains over 11,000manuals. At first glance it appears to have as much as The Boat Anchor Archive. I haven't had a chance to explore what it offers us but there are 637 documents / manuals / etc listed for Tektronix. It has a very nice, clean web interface. The Tek documents start at The home page is at The owner is: Oliver Poggensee Zeppelinplatz 1 25335 Elmshorn Germany This is what Oliver says on the site's home page: I am happy to welcome you on my site. This download archive has been available since 2007. Starting with a few hundred manuals, there are now well over 11,000, and new ones are added every month. I have designed these pages to help all people who own and use old electronic devices. So that they can be maintained, serviced and repaired more easily, quickly and professionally. No matter if it is a radio, a television or a measuring device. The main focus of these pages is on older devices, but you can also find some technical documentation for newer devices here. With my own search for good download possibilities I often found fake pages, where you can't download the manual you are looking for, or dubious dealers selling the manuals that are actually freely available, I want to counter this with my site. I hope that you will use this offer actively and that it is useful for you. All manuals here are completely free and can be downloaded directly without any restrictions. Do you have any manuals or images of your device, please upload it here and share it with others . I have taken the effort to collect all information available about the respective manuals. There is for example a preview of the first page, the page number, date of publication and many other information. I don't want to compete with professional schematic services, most manuals are of medium to low quality, not comparable to the high resolution scans of professional service providers. All manuals have been provided by users from various sources. I have attempted not to publish material from professional service providers here, but if there is material from a professional service here, I will delete it as soon as possible. For this purpose a short message is sufficient. Dennis Tillman W7pF |
Re: In Defense of the 7A19
Good Day,
thank you for this great write-up and insights! , Dennus!The key take-aways from this are still?absolutely relevant today.Think of the ongoing overkill of announcements of useless or irrelevant features in the Smartphone industry today or 8k-resolution TVs with a screen size?simply too big for the average EU house... And?then a competitor comes up with an online store that simply works.? Cheers, Magnus? On Sat, May 30, 2020 at 01:18 AM, tek_547 wrote: All: I may not be a Electronics Genius, but I do know the "sales game".? HP mocked TEK's "bells and whistles" because those were the most visible and attractive features, the ones that the engineering community (plus others) wanted and usually needed.. Competitive company's "Marketing Departments" almost always mock features that they really have no answer for, deflect and distract is the plan.? Sales and Marketing are 90% BS and 10% knowledge. It would appear to me that TEK established the on screen readout first, probably because it was the most difficult to implement as it was "new technology".? Bells and whistles sell products, generally much quicker than "technical specs".? ? You can always "fix" bandwidth, triggers and all that other stuff.? TEK laid the cornerstone for the 7K series and built from there, they were playing the "long" game; however they certainly knew they were behind at the time.? HP had a technically superior product, but only for that instant in time.? After that, as Dennis stated, HP played catch up or just stopped playing. For me personally, the HP scopes are just not attractive in their esthetics.? No offense to those who like them, just my personal preference and opinion.? I find that the earlier TEK scopes almost always had a more intuitive layout on their scopes and a more attractive panel design.? In the categories of Esthetics and ergonomics, the devil is definitely in the details, TEK got it right most of the time.? Either brand of scope is likely much more capable of performing than my poor old brain is in understanding. Great piece of information and history from Dennis, Thanks Again? ? ? -- Michael Lynch Dardanelle, Arkansas |
Re: Tek 4041 GPIB Controller
I do have a full set of development ROMs. My 4041 is in perfect condition,
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and only needs healthy tapes to continue providing useful service. On Fri, May 29, 2020 at 6:16 PM Monty McGraw <mmcgraw74@...> wrote:
Gary, --
Gary Robert Bosworth grbosworth@... Tel: 310-317-2247 |
Re: Advice about buying a 7904
Chuck Harris
If you are happy with the amount of noise you get from
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your 7104, then a 7904A would be a good choice, as it has the same fan, and a very similar power supply. Anything you can use with your 7104 will work just fine, albeit with less bandwidth, on a 7904(A). -Chuck Harris Reginald Beardsley via groups.io wrote: I *have* a 7104 with 2x 7A29, 7B10 & 7B15 plugins. But the 7104 CRT is delicate and difficult and expensive to replace. So my reason for a 7904 is to get the best analog BW I can get without wear and tear on the 7104 CRT. So if the plugins I have will be happy in a 7904 then I'd be pretty well set. They can see regular use in the 7904 and if I need more BW I can move them to the 7104 sitting next to the 7904. |
Re: In Defense of the 7A19
On Sat, May 30, 2020 at 01:18 AM, tek_547 wrote:
All: I may not be a Electronics Genius, but I do know the "sales game". HP mocked TEK's "bells and whistles" because those were the most visible and attractive features, the ones that the engineering community (plus others) wanted and usually needed.. Competitive company's "Marketing Departments" almost always mock features that they really have no answer for, deflect and distract is the plan. Sales and Marketing are 90% BS and 10% knowledge. It would appear to me that TEK established the on screen readout first, probably because it was the most difficult to implement as it was "new technology". Bells and whistles sell products, generally much quicker than "technical specs". You can always "fix" bandwidth, triggers and all that other stuff. TEK laid the cornerstone for the 7K series and built from there, they were playing the "long" game; however they certainly knew they were behind at the time. HP had a technically superior product, but only for that instant in time. After that, as Dennis stated, HP played catch up or just stopped playing. For me personally, the HP scopes are just not attractive in their esthetics. No offense to those who like them, just my personal preference and opinion. I find that the earlier TEK scopes almost always had a more intuitive layout on their scopes and a more attractive panel design. In the categories of Esthetics and ergonomics, the devil is definitely in the details, TEK got it right most of the time. Either brand of scope is likely much more capable of performing than my poor old brain is in understanding. Great piece of information and history from Dennis, Thanks Again -- Michael Lynch Dardanelle, Arkansas |
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