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In article , "Ian White, G3SEK"
writes: 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." Well, I have no "un-named" sources, only the named ones. For two interviews with Howard Vollum, co-founder of Tektronix, try: http://www.infoage.org/oh-howard-vollum.html Infoage is concentrating on the Signal Corps labs, most notably Camp Evans, NJ (outside of Fort Monmouth) which became the "Evans Laboratories," an adjunct of Fort Monmouth (along with Coles and Squires labs outside of the Fort in the 1950s). Vollum spent some service time at Camp Evans after overseas work on radar in Great Britain. Vollum's interviews consist of one in 1955 and another in 1980. There's some more at: http://www.ohsu.edu/vollum/about.htm There's also archive material from EE Times and several Tektronix collector's web pages. I don't find any reference to Hewlett-Packard, but more on the rivalry with Allen B. DuMont and his oscilloscope company. My own acquaintence is first with the 511AD model in 1954 while in U.S. Army and becoming a supervisor on microwave radio relay equipment. As far as I can recall, the sweep trigger of the 511 is little more than a Schmitt Trigger circuit which was rather common in pulse circuitry of the 50s. All of the first Tektronix scopes had regulated power supplies which enabled the stability of the vertical sweep to give true volts-per-graticule-marking information and for the sweep rate to be calibrated with some precision. Whether in service and maintenance or engineering design, the true information on the trace is more important than whether or not the sweep trigger is fancy (which it was, again, stable to use repeatedly thanks to the regulated HV supplies). Add to that the "unblanking" of the CRT while in sweep (blank screen during retrace) and the display is quite natural and easy to use. Having used a number of different instruments and scopes, I can't agree with the "standard control arrangement" comments. Each and every instrument has, to me, ALWAYS had some differences which required attention to the bell and whistle control lay-outs. This got worse by the 1970s when more and more function controls were added to the front panels and the sizes of controls got smaller and smaller. My fingers remained the same size...it got ridiculous with the pointy little "keys" of the optional 7000 series (?) plug-in for writing things on the CRT face...and the plug-in "spectrum analyzer" modules from a company that Tektronix acquired. Given the rather totally different function controls of today's DSOs, it boils down to everyone needing to understand their instruments FIRST before trying to use them. Ain't no such thing as "standard control arrangements" when the controls don't apply to newer functions. Len Anderson retired (from regular hours) electronic engineer person |
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