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#1
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John Miles wrote in
: Some of these gurus are admittedly respected veterans of companies such as Tektronix, with whom mere mortals are loath to argue. I worked for TEK for 21.5 years as a service tech in 2 of their field offices;repaired and cal'd a lot of scopes and other TEK products. All I can say is, those switches must not have been of the greatest quality in the first place, or the gurus wouldn't have to spend so much of their time on Usenet warning people against hosing them down with WD-40. Considering how longlasting and popular the 465 is,that's not a very smart sentence.The same HF and LF cam switches were also used in the high- performance 7000 series lab scopes. Just sayin', is all. No disrespect intended. ![]() -- jm Same here. -- Jim Yanik jyanik-at-kua.net |
#2
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If there's any disagreement between what I say and what Jim says about
maintaining Tek scopes, listen to Jim and not me. He was there in the trenches; I wasn't. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Jim Yanik wrote: I worked for TEK for 21.5 years as a service tech in 2 of their field offices;repaired and cal'd a lot of scopes and other TEK products. . . . |
#3
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I recently gave away a 465 that was giving me fits. I don't know what
happened to it, but it had squirrelly problems all over. It was shipped to Tek for repair in the early 1990's and Tek said it was unrepairable. Of course I knew better....... It was used extensively in field service, and was probably vibrated to death, but it had the damndest problems I ever saw. The ones that really killed me (other than the vertical attenuator switches) were an oscillation in the Ch 1 vertical, inability to get a smooth leading edge on a fast rise (fall was OK) and an intermittently failing intensified sweep. I spent about 100 hours on that thing and never did get it to work right. I don't know if that had multi-layer boards or not, but it acted like some inaccessible connections were intermittent. I checked and changed component after component, and there would always be one more trouble. That was my weekend for a few months; I would start and go througn the WHOLE calibration procedure (including the stuff that everybody skips, like swinging the line to check the power supply at high and low line conditions) to see how far I could get this time. Undoubtedly I would stop at some point because the adjustment didn't have enough range or some such. I'd fix that and next week a different set of stuff wouldn't work. The problems were never expensive stuff, just resistors and capacitors. That was the ONLY Tek scope that ever stumped me. I even managed to keep a 647 running, and those NEVER worked. Yes indeed. The perversity of the inanimate. So I gave away the 465 and bought a TDS2012. Took a little getting used to, but I've never looked back. Still have the old reliable 547 and a whole slew of plug-ins in the corner, but they are going to need a new home before too long. "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... If there's any disagreement between what I say and what Jim says about maintaining Tek scopes, listen to Jim and not me. He was there in the trenches; I wasn't. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Jim Yanik wrote: I worked for TEK for 21.5 years as a service tech in 2 of their field offices;repaired and cal'd a lot of scopes and other TEK products. . . . |
#4
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On Wed, 22 Dec 2004 14:55:03 -0500, BFoelsch wrote:
So I gave away the 465 and bought a TDS2012. Took a little getting used to, but I've never looked back. Still have the old reliable 547 and a whole slew of plug-ins in the corner, but they are going to need a new home before too long. Tek won't fix the 2012 either ![]() |
#5
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![]() "Bob Stephens" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 22 Dec 2004 14:55:03 -0500, BFoelsch wrote: So I gave away the 465 and bought a TDS2012. Took a little getting used to, but I've never looked back. Still have the old reliable 547 and a whole slew of plug-ins in the corner, but they are going to need a new home before too long. Tek won't fix the 2012 either ![]() Well, it did come with a three year warranty, and it does work well right now, which is more than the 465 did. But I hear you. Time will tell. |
#6
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Bob Stephens wrote in
: On Wed, 22 Dec 2004 14:55:03 -0500, BFoelsch wrote: So I gave away the 465 and bought a TDS2012. Took a little getting used to, but I've never looked back. Still have the old reliable 547 and a whole slew of plug-ins in the corner, but they are going to need a new home before too long. Tek won't fix the 2012 either ![]() TEK has a Long Term Product Support(LTPS) policy,where the item will be serviceable by TEK X number of years after it's last sold in their catalog. They have a list of whats supported and for how long on their website,IIRC. "X" used to be 9 years,then got cut to 6,then some items are only ONE year. That's why you have to check the list. Also,repair prices climb in the last couple of years of "support",to encourage you to buy a new unit. AFTER the LTPS period is over,the item is no longer supported at all. No exchange modules,and no parts support unless the part is used in a current product. -- Jim Yanik jyanik-at-kua.net |
#7
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"BFoelsch" wrote in
: I recently gave away a 465 that was giving me fits. I don't know what happened to it, but it had squirrelly problems all over. It was shipped to Tek for repair in the early 1990's and Tek said it was unrepairable. Of course I knew better....... It was used extensively in field service, and was probably vibrated to death, but it had the damndest problems I ever saw. The ones that really killed me (other than the vertical attenuator switches) were an oscillation in the Ch 1 vertical, inability to get a smooth leading edge on a fast rise (fall was OK) and an intermittently failing intensified sweep. I spent about 100 hours on that thing and never did get it to work right. I don't know if that had multi-layer boards or not, but it acted like some inaccessible connections were intermittent. I checked and changed component after component, and there would always be one more trouble. That was my weekend for a few months; I would start and go througn the WHOLE calibration procedure (including the stuff that everybody skips, like swinging the line to check the power supply at high and low line conditions) to see how far I could get this time. Undoubtedly I would stop at some point because the adjustment didn't have enough range or some such. I'd fix that and next week a different set of stuff wouldn't work. The problems were never expensive stuff, just resistors and capacitors. That was the ONLY Tek scope that ever stumped me. I even managed to keep a 647 running, and those NEVER worked. Yes indeed. The perversity of the inanimate. So I gave away the 465 and bought a TDS2012. Took a little getting used to, but I've never looked back. Still have the old reliable 547 and a whole slew of plug-ins in the corner, but they are going to need a new home before too long. Trying to support a TEK product without the Tek selected transistors and other specialized components is extremely difficult. One of the first things I did when getting a unit that someone else had tried to repair was to find and remove all the non-Tek xstrs,and replace with the proper TEK parts.They were often causes of oscillations and bad HF responses.Some scopes may have had ferrite beads used in some places lost or not installed with the new transistors.One other common problem was a black silver oxide growing on the tiny HF trimmer caps,especially on the bottom of them,acting as an insulator and making the cap open and ineffective. IMO,the HF cam contacts used in the attenuators should be failing and no longer repairable due to the plastic part that holds the gold contact to the spring metal degrading and coming apart,or loss of spring tension. That's a problem with using plastic parts,they outgass and eventually degrade and lose strength.Some of the atten intermittents can be due to the outgassing making a film on the contacts and pads. -- Jim Yanik jyanik-at-kua.net |
#8
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![]() "Jim Yanik" . wrote in message .. . "BFoelsch" wrote in : I recently gave away a 465 that was giving me fits. I don't know what happened to it, but it had squirrelly problems all over. It was shipped to Tek for repair in the early 1990's and Tek said it was unrepairable. Of course I knew better....... It was used extensively in field service, and was probably vibrated to death, but it had the damndest problems I ever saw. The ones that really killed me (other than the vertical attenuator switches) were an oscillation in the Ch 1 vertical, inability to get a smooth leading edge on a fast rise (fall was OK) and an intermittently failing intensified sweep. I spent about 100 hours on that thing and never did get it to work right. I don't know if that had multi-layer boards or not, but it acted like some inaccessible connections were intermittent. I checked and changed component after component, and there would always be one more trouble. That was my weekend for a few months; I would start and go througn the WHOLE calibration procedure (including the stuff that everybody skips, like swinging the line to check the power supply at high and low line conditions) to see how far I could get this time. Undoubtedly I would stop at some point because the adjustment didn't have enough range or some such. I'd fix that and next week a different set of stuff wouldn't work. The problems were never expensive stuff, just resistors and capacitors. That was the ONLY Tek scope that ever stumped me. I even managed to keep a 647 running, and those NEVER worked. Yes indeed. The perversity of the inanimate. So I gave away the 465 and bought a TDS2012. Took a little getting used to, but I've never looked back. Still have the old reliable 547 and a whole slew of plug-ins in the corner, but they are going to need a new home before too long. Trying to support a TEK product without the Tek selected transistors and other specialized components is extremely difficult. One of the first things I did when getting a unit that someone else had tried to repair was to find and remove all the non-Tek xstrs,and replace with the proper TEK parts.They were often causes of oscillations and bad HF responses.Some scopes may have had ferrite beads used in some places lost or not installed with the new transistors.One other common problem was a black silver oxide growing on the tiny HF trimmer caps,especially on the bottom of them,acting as an insulator and making the cap open and ineffective. IMO,the HF cam contacts used in the attenuators should be failing and no longer repairable due to the plastic part that holds the gold contact to the spring metal degrading and coming apart,or loss of spring tension. That's a problem with using plastic parts,they outgass and eventually degrade and lose strength.Some of the atten intermittents can be due to the outgassing making a film on the contacts and pads. Yes, this unit could indeed have had some non-Tek semiconductors in it. I got the HF ocsillation to stop by putting a few gimmick capacitors, less that 1 pF, at the output of the Ch 1 vertical amp. Didn't affect the frequency response any, but the vertical output amp had a few extra time constants visible on a leading edge that none of the adjustments would control. It was a real learning experience, but the patient died. One thing I DID learn was that gold-plated sockets don't mean a thing if they mate with tinned leads. When I first got that scope almost nothing worked, and major recovery was effected by removing and replacing all the socketed connectiions, which in that scope included virtually all of the semiconductors. I also suspected that that scope was not a "complete" instrument; seems to me that the versions and serial numbers didn't really agree, as if someone tried to make one good scope out of parts from other ones that were of varying vintages. Anyway, I decided that I am out of the scope-fixing business. It's kind of like changing the engine in a car, the first couple dozen are fun, and after that its just plain work. -- Jim Yanik jyanik-at-kua.net |
#10
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John Miles wrote in
: In article , . says... Considering how longlasting and popular the 465 is,that's not a very smart sentence.The same HF and LF cam switches were also used in the high- performance 7000 series lab scopes. True enough in the case of the 465. That model in particular seems to have been very robust. You don't see many owners asking about how to clean 465 switches. 485 switches, though, are another thing entirely. It's very rare to see a 485 whose vertical attenuator switches aren't noisy. Perhaps gold-pad abrasion has caught up to the instruments over time; however, I'm personally aware of at least two anecdotal cases of noisy 485 switches being fixed (at least for the time being) with contact cleaner. It's possible there's more than one cause of switch degradation at work in the 485 and other notorious "problem children." Either way, though, the original designers were clearly not omniscient in all cases, or the problems with certain models wouldn't be as widespread as they are. I wish there were a sure-fire way to fix the 485's front-end switches; it was my favorite Tek scope of the bunch otherwise. -- jm Both 465 and 485 use the same HF cam switch contacts. TEK used to have a repair kit that included both contacts,drill bits to remove the securing rivets,and tiny nuts and bolts to secure the new contacts. They also had a repair kit for the LF contacts used in the timing switch,with an alignment guide to get them straight. Both are no longer available. -- Jim Yanik jyanik-at-kua.net |
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