RadioBanter

RadioBanter (https://www.radiobanter.com/)
-   Homebrew (https://www.radiobanter.com/homebrew/)
-   -   Tektronix is Grrreeaatttt!!! (https://www.radiobanter.com/homebrew/21841-tektronix-grrreeaatttt.html)

ddwyer December 9th 03 08:30 PM

In article , Joel Kolstad JKolstad71
writes

I am going to get myself a nice 2465B or perhaps a 2467 after finish school
and find myself a Real Job again -- in a sense those scopes seem like the
pinnacle of pure-analog scope development and even if they are only good to
400MHz, there'll continue to be plenty of designs that can be serviced by
such scopes for years to come.

CRT/Analog scopes are superior in many ways that are seldom discussed.
Dynamic range is equivalent to 24 bits which with 200MHz is not
equalled in the digital domain.
--
ddwyer

Steven Swift December 9th 03 08:47 PM

ddwyer writes:

CRT/Analog scopes are superior in many ways that are seldom discussed.
Dynamic range is equivalent to 24 bits which with 200MHz is not
equalled in the digital domain.
--
ddwyer


Use both every day. The digital scope (Tek DPO style) is great for analysing,
but sometimes is it a lot easier to find a problem on the old 500MHz 7904.
Once I find the problem signal, I can then set the digital scope to trigger
properly and analyse the details.

The 7904 is the "stand" for the 3054.

Steve.
--
Steven D. Swift, , http://www.novatech-instr.com
NOVATECH INSTRUMENTS, INC. P.O. Box 55997
206.301.8986, fax 206.363.4367 Seattle, Washington 98155 USA

Steven Swift December 9th 03 08:47 PM

ddwyer writes:

CRT/Analog scopes are superior in many ways that are seldom discussed.
Dynamic range is equivalent to 24 bits which with 200MHz is not
equalled in the digital domain.
--
ddwyer


Use both every day. The digital scope (Tek DPO style) is great for analysing,
but sometimes is it a lot easier to find a problem on the old 500MHz 7904.
Once I find the problem signal, I can then set the digital scope to trigger
properly and analyse the details.

The 7904 is the "stand" for the 3054.

Steve.
--
Steven D. Swift, , http://www.novatech-instr.com
NOVATECH INSTRUMENTS, INC. P.O. Box 55997
206.301.8986, fax 206.363.4367 Seattle, Washington 98155 USA

Jim Adney December 10th 03 01:12 AM

On 8 Dec 2003 08:00:52 -0800 (Howard) wrote:

I have used Tektronix instruments for almost 30 years now, and don't
know how I could have got along without them. Most of my work has been
in commercial radio and television.


While I agree with much of what you say, it's only fair to point out
that it's the old-timers among us who mostly feel this way. Tek has
changed.

The manuals are written incredibly well, and I have received
assistance from tech support on devices more than 25 years old.


Yes, the OLD manuals were wonderful, but have you looked at a manual
for a Tek scope sold new in the last 10 years? They have no theory of
operation, no parts lists, and no schematics. If you try to call them
for tech info on an old scope today, you're pretty likely to be
politely turned down.

I reflect with fondness on repairing a device like a waveform monitor,
more than 20 years old, and finding a small coil of silver solder on
the chassis in a place that was designed for it, tucked neatly in its
own "home." Tek has used silver solder for decades now...they have
always known it makes a better solder joint...and they want their
stuff to keep on working, 24/7 for years and years.


The special little coils of silver bearing solder WERE neat, but they
were intended for use ONLY on the little ceramic terminal strips. The
silver content was necessary to prevent delamination of the metalized
part of the strip. This was carefully explained in their manual.

I don't think they used that solder in any solid state gear, nor did
they provide the little rolls in any solid state scopes.

And now I hear that they desroy their own equipment so they can sell
more new stuff?! Baloney.


Baloney perhaps, but I belive it is still true. I've heard it from
people who were there and saw it happen.

I think I am hearing from people who not only do not understand that
"you get what you pay for," but have no use for the quality and
accuracy of the products they are complaining about.


The scopes you're remembering are the products made decades ago. Those
were the scopes that made Tektronix' reputation as exceeding the
"state of the art." In recent times Tek has been taken over by the
bean counters who have entirely different priorities.

It's unfortunate that a giant like this has now stooped to this level,
but you really should listen to some of the people here, and
elsewhere, who have worked with them, and for them, in recent times.

I'm afraid that much the same thing is happening to Hewlett-Packard.
The corporate climate that Bill Hewlett and David Packard spent their
lives building has now gone the way of corporate acquisition over
innovation. Agilent may continue to do well, but Bill & Dave's names
have been sacrificed on the alter of profit.

Yes, I own several old Tek scopes. I consider myself a Tek youngster
as I've only been using them for about 35 years. I've got a nice new
one at work that only seems to weigh a couple of pounds and still does
300MHz. It takes me 20 minutes to figure it out every time I turn it
on, but I assume that's just because I don't turn it on frequently
enough.

-
-----------------------------------------------
Jim Adney

Madison, WI 53711 USA
-----------------------------------------------

Jim Adney December 10th 03 01:12 AM

On 8 Dec 2003 08:00:52 -0800 (Howard) wrote:

I have used Tektronix instruments for almost 30 years now, and don't
know how I could have got along without them. Most of my work has been
in commercial radio and television.


While I agree with much of what you say, it's only fair to point out
that it's the old-timers among us who mostly feel this way. Tek has
changed.

The manuals are written incredibly well, and I have received
assistance from tech support on devices more than 25 years old.


Yes, the OLD manuals were wonderful, but have you looked at a manual
for a Tek scope sold new in the last 10 years? They have no theory of
operation, no parts lists, and no schematics. If you try to call them
for tech info on an old scope today, you're pretty likely to be
politely turned down.

I reflect with fondness on repairing a device like a waveform monitor,
more than 20 years old, and finding a small coil of silver solder on
the chassis in a place that was designed for it, tucked neatly in its
own "home." Tek has used silver solder for decades now...they have
always known it makes a better solder joint...and they want their
stuff to keep on working, 24/7 for years and years.


The special little coils of silver bearing solder WERE neat, but they
were intended for use ONLY on the little ceramic terminal strips. The
silver content was necessary to prevent delamination of the metalized
part of the strip. This was carefully explained in their manual.

I don't think they used that solder in any solid state gear, nor did
they provide the little rolls in any solid state scopes.

And now I hear that they desroy their own equipment so they can sell
more new stuff?! Baloney.


Baloney perhaps, but I belive it is still true. I've heard it from
people who were there and saw it happen.

I think I am hearing from people who not only do not understand that
"you get what you pay for," but have no use for the quality and
accuracy of the products they are complaining about.


The scopes you're remembering are the products made decades ago. Those
were the scopes that made Tektronix' reputation as exceeding the
"state of the art." In recent times Tek has been taken over by the
bean counters who have entirely different priorities.

It's unfortunate that a giant like this has now stooped to this level,
but you really should listen to some of the people here, and
elsewhere, who have worked with them, and for them, in recent times.

I'm afraid that much the same thing is happening to Hewlett-Packard.
The corporate climate that Bill Hewlett and David Packard spent their
lives building has now gone the way of corporate acquisition over
innovation. Agilent may continue to do well, but Bill & Dave's names
have been sacrificed on the alter of profit.

Yes, I own several old Tek scopes. I consider myself a Tek youngster
as I've only been using them for about 35 years. I've got a nice new
one at work that only seems to weigh a couple of pounds and still does
300MHz. It takes me 20 minutes to figure it out every time I turn it
on, but I assume that's just because I don't turn it on frequently
enough.

-
-----------------------------------------------
Jim Adney

Madison, WI 53711 USA
-----------------------------------------------

Roy Lewallen December 10th 03 03:46 AM

Jim Adney wrote:

. . .


[Good comments]

. . .

Yes, I own several old Tek scopes. I consider myself a Tek youngster
as I've only been using them for about 35 years. I've got a nice new
one at work that only seems to weigh a couple of pounds and still does
300MHz. It takes me 20 minutes to figure it out every time I turn it
on, but I assume that's just because I don't turn it on frequently
enough.


There's another reason.

For a long time, scopes were designed by engineers who used scopes
daily, as their main tool. It wasn't any trick at all for them to select
features that were useful, and operation that was intuitive. These days,
the features are decided mainly by marketers and upper level managers,
few of whom ever spent any time actually using a scope. They're
implemented by software engineers, most of whom don't have the slightest
idea what a scope does or how to use one. Consequently, we can look
forward to a future of instruments that will be harder and harder to use
and understand, and won't have the feature set the user really needs.

I'll give you just one example, from the development of one of the first
highly digital lines of scopes. A mock-up had been created out of some
computer pieces, a display unit, and bits of this and that, so the
engineers could get a sense of how the new instrument was to use. I sat
down at the bench, and the first thing I did was to adjust the
horizontal position. I turned the (only) knob clockwise, and the trace
moved to the left. "Oh," I said to the software engineer who had
implemented most of the functions, "I see you've got that backward, but
that's easy enough to fix." "No," he said, "that's how I intended it to
work. It's logical: the delay increases when you turn the knob
clockwise." Pointing out to him that, logical or not, it would throw a
barrier in the way of every person who ever used the instrument, had
absolutely no effect on his certainty that his way was best(*). (And,
yes, I would have made the exact same argument that turning the knob to
the right *should* move the display to the left if the instrument were a
spectrum analyzer.) In this case, the project manager was a former
analog engineer, and he overruled the software engineer. But these days,
most management positions are filled with people who have seldom or
never actually used a scope, so more and more counter-intuitive, clumsy,
and useless features are showing up. Get used to it.

(*) In the '60's, when I was a technician, every place I went would have
a bunch of Tek scopes and one or two HPs. The HPs were just fine, except
that HP had insisted on making their own user interface. Where a Tek
scope would use a knob, they'd use buttons, and so forth, and the
controls were all put in different spots. We'd swear if we got stuck
with using one of the HPs, since it would take so long to figure out
where the needed control was and which way to turn it or which button to
push. So no one ever recommended buying an HP -- we all wanted Tek
scopes -- and as much due to familiarity as anything else. Then the
Japanese scopes came on the market. Y'know what? The knobs and other
controls were not only in exactly the same places as on Tek scopes, they
were even the same shape and color. We could pick one up and begin using
it right away. Y'know what else? Tek took a real beating from the
Japanese scopes, way worse than they ever did from HP.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL
Tek, 1974-80, 1984-95


Roy Lewallen December 10th 03 03:46 AM

Jim Adney wrote:

. . .


[Good comments]

. . .

Yes, I own several old Tek scopes. I consider myself a Tek youngster
as I've only been using them for about 35 years. I've got a nice new
one at work that only seems to weigh a couple of pounds and still does
300MHz. It takes me 20 minutes to figure it out every time I turn it
on, but I assume that's just because I don't turn it on frequently
enough.


There's another reason.

For a long time, scopes were designed by engineers who used scopes
daily, as their main tool. It wasn't any trick at all for them to select
features that were useful, and operation that was intuitive. These days,
the features are decided mainly by marketers and upper level managers,
few of whom ever spent any time actually using a scope. They're
implemented by software engineers, most of whom don't have the slightest
idea what a scope does or how to use one. Consequently, we can look
forward to a future of instruments that will be harder and harder to use
and understand, and won't have the feature set the user really needs.

I'll give you just one example, from the development of one of the first
highly digital lines of scopes. A mock-up had been created out of some
computer pieces, a display unit, and bits of this and that, so the
engineers could get a sense of how the new instrument was to use. I sat
down at the bench, and the first thing I did was to adjust the
horizontal position. I turned the (only) knob clockwise, and the trace
moved to the left. "Oh," I said to the software engineer who had
implemented most of the functions, "I see you've got that backward, but
that's easy enough to fix." "No," he said, "that's how I intended it to
work. It's logical: the delay increases when you turn the knob
clockwise." Pointing out to him that, logical or not, it would throw a
barrier in the way of every person who ever used the instrument, had
absolutely no effect on his certainty that his way was best(*). (And,
yes, I would have made the exact same argument that turning the knob to
the right *should* move the display to the left if the instrument were a
spectrum analyzer.) In this case, the project manager was a former
analog engineer, and he overruled the software engineer. But these days,
most management positions are filled with people who have seldom or
never actually used a scope, so more and more counter-intuitive, clumsy,
and useless features are showing up. Get used to it.

(*) In the '60's, when I was a technician, every place I went would have
a bunch of Tek scopes and one or two HPs. The HPs were just fine, except
that HP had insisted on making their own user interface. Where a Tek
scope would use a knob, they'd use buttons, and so forth, and the
controls were all put in different spots. We'd swear if we got stuck
with using one of the HPs, since it would take so long to figure out
where the needed control was and which way to turn it or which button to
push. So no one ever recommended buying an HP -- we all wanted Tek
scopes -- and as much due to familiarity as anything else. Then the
Japanese scopes came on the market. Y'know what? The knobs and other
controls were not only in exactly the same places as on Tek scopes, they
were even the same shape and color. We could pick one up and begin using
it right away. Y'know what else? Tek took a real beating from the
Japanese scopes, way worse than they ever did from HP.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL
Tek, 1974-80, 1984-95


Frank Dinger December 10th 03 11:33 AM

There's another reason.

For a long time, scopes were designed by engineers who used scopes
daily, as their main tool. It wasn't any trick at all for them to select
features that were useful, and operation that was intuitive. These days,
the features are decided mainly by marketers and upper level managers,
few of whom ever spent any time actually using a scope. They're
implemented by software engineers, most of whom don't have the slightest
idea what a scope does or how to use one. Consequently, we can look
forward to a future of instruments that will be harder and harder to use
and understand, and won't have the feature set the user really needs.

I'll give you just one example, from the development of one of the first
highly digital lines of scopes. A mock-up had been created out of some
computer pieces, a display unit, and bits of this and that, so the
engineers could get a sense of how the new instrument was to use. I sat
down at the bench, and the first thing I did was to adjust the
horizontal position. I turned the (only) knob clockwise, and the trace
moved to the left. "Oh," I said to the software engineer who had
implemented most of the functions, "I see you've got that backward, but
that's easy enough to fix." "No," he said, "that's how I intended it to
work. It's logical: the delay increases when you turn the knob
clockwise." Pointing out to him that, logical or not, it would throw a
barrier in the way of every person who ever used the instrument, had
absolutely no effect on his certainty that his way was best(*). (And,
yes, I would have made the exact same argument that turning the knob to
the right *should* move the display to the left if the instrument were a
spectrum analyzer.) In this case, the project manager was a former
analog engineer, and he overruled the software engineer. But these days,
most management positions are filled with people who have seldom or
never actually used a scope, so more and more counter-intuitive, clumsy,
and useless features are showing up. Get used to it.

(*) In the '60's, when I was a technician, every place I went would have
a bunch of Tek scopes and one or two HPs. The HPs were just fine, except
that HP had insisted on making their own user interface. Where a Tek
scope would use a knob, they'd use buttons, and so forth, and the
controls were all put in different spots. We'd swear if we got stuck
with using one of the HPs, since it would take so long to figure out
where the needed control was and which way to turn it or which button to
push. So no one ever recommended buying an HP -- we all wanted Tek
scopes -- and as much due to familiarity as anything else. Then the
Japanese scopes came on the market. Y'know what? The knobs and other
controls were not only in exactly the same places as on Tek scopes, they
were even the same shape and color. We could pick one up and begin using
it right away. Y'know what else? Tek took a real beating from the
Japanese scopes, way worse than they ever did from HP.

===================
Roy , Tnx for your interesting comments.
What surprises me is that ,as you highlighted , ergonomics no longer seem
to be important in scope development.
Whereas in other industrial activities and product design ,industrial
designers pay a lot of attention to ergonomics.
Perhaps it is that modern scopes (and similar equipment) are designed by
nerds for nerds.
It also adds to the perception that one has to be a 'specialist' to operate
and use this type of equipment ,which I fear is an ever increasing element
of modern marketing . A 'KISS' approach apparently does bring in the $$$.

Frank GM0CSZ / KN6WH




Frank Dinger December 10th 03 11:33 AM

There's another reason.

For a long time, scopes were designed by engineers who used scopes
daily, as their main tool. It wasn't any trick at all for them to select
features that were useful, and operation that was intuitive. These days,
the features are decided mainly by marketers and upper level managers,
few of whom ever spent any time actually using a scope. They're
implemented by software engineers, most of whom don't have the slightest
idea what a scope does or how to use one. Consequently, we can look
forward to a future of instruments that will be harder and harder to use
and understand, and won't have the feature set the user really needs.

I'll give you just one example, from the development of one of the first
highly digital lines of scopes. A mock-up had been created out of some
computer pieces, a display unit, and bits of this and that, so the
engineers could get a sense of how the new instrument was to use. I sat
down at the bench, and the first thing I did was to adjust the
horizontal position. I turned the (only) knob clockwise, and the trace
moved to the left. "Oh," I said to the software engineer who had
implemented most of the functions, "I see you've got that backward, but
that's easy enough to fix." "No," he said, "that's how I intended it to
work. It's logical: the delay increases when you turn the knob
clockwise." Pointing out to him that, logical or not, it would throw a
barrier in the way of every person who ever used the instrument, had
absolutely no effect on his certainty that his way was best(*). (And,
yes, I would have made the exact same argument that turning the knob to
the right *should* move the display to the left if the instrument were a
spectrum analyzer.) In this case, the project manager was a former
analog engineer, and he overruled the software engineer. But these days,
most management positions are filled with people who have seldom or
never actually used a scope, so more and more counter-intuitive, clumsy,
and useless features are showing up. Get used to it.

(*) In the '60's, when I was a technician, every place I went would have
a bunch of Tek scopes and one or two HPs. The HPs were just fine, except
that HP had insisted on making their own user interface. Where a Tek
scope would use a knob, they'd use buttons, and so forth, and the
controls were all put in different spots. We'd swear if we got stuck
with using one of the HPs, since it would take so long to figure out
where the needed control was and which way to turn it or which button to
push. So no one ever recommended buying an HP -- we all wanted Tek
scopes -- and as much due to familiarity as anything else. Then the
Japanese scopes came on the market. Y'know what? The knobs and other
controls were not only in exactly the same places as on Tek scopes, they
were even the same shape and color. We could pick one up and begin using
it right away. Y'know what else? Tek took a real beating from the
Japanese scopes, way worse than they ever did from HP.

===================
Roy , Tnx for your interesting comments.
What surprises me is that ,as you highlighted , ergonomics no longer seem
to be important in scope development.
Whereas in other industrial activities and product design ,industrial
designers pay a lot of attention to ergonomics.
Perhaps it is that modern scopes (and similar equipment) are designed by
nerds for nerds.
It also adds to the perception that one has to be a 'specialist' to operate
and use this type of equipment ,which I fear is an ever increasing element
of modern marketing . A 'KISS' approach apparently does bring in the $$$.

Frank GM0CSZ / KN6WH




Ian White, G3SEK December 10th 03 12:05 PM

Roy Lewallen wrote:
These days, the features are decided mainly by marketers and upper
level managers, few of whom ever spent any time actually using a scope.


An un-named source working for H-P/ Agilent totally agrees with that!

He also added:
"The founder of Tek invented the triggered timebase and offered it to
Hewlett-Packard. Bill and Dave saw the value but were committed to doing
other things for their near future and suggested he start his own firm,
giving him some advice along the way."



--
73 from Ian G3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB)
Editor, 'The VHF/UHF DX Book'
http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:35 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
RadioBanter.com