The rear vertical output does not necessarily match the bandwidth on Tektronix oscilloscopes (and it will be really slow if not terminated into 50 ohms) and it may only be roughly calibrated. In addition, since the single ended rear vertical output signal is generated after the input signal is converted to a differential signal, it may suffer from excessive common mode noise. My 7603 (just like in the video) had a problem with that until I made a design change to improve the common mode rejection of the conversion by more than 20 dB.
I like using the vertical output signal on my Tektronix 7000 mainframes so I can use my 7A22 and 7A13 differential vertical amplifiers with my DSOs.
On my 465 the rear CH1 output port appears to have a pretty flat response out to about 100MHz Both the noise floor and the signal response looks good to 100MHz. It isn't calibrated but I can use the analyser to calibrate its 'gain'. I can also use the analyser to measure the S/N ratio and therefore predict the front end noise figure when set to 5mV/div and driven from a 50R source.
I am sorry that it took longer than I expected to respond. I got distracted and then Firefox crashed losing my initial reply.
On other Tektronix oscilloscopes with vertical outputs that is not necessarily the case which is why I mentioned it.
Note: I'm terminating the output with the 50R input impedance of the spectrum analyser. Also, I found that selecting 20MHz BW on the front panel has no effect on the noise or signal response of the rear panel port because it is tapped off just before the part of the scope that limits the bandwidth to 20MHz when this feature is selected. So the bandwidth at the rear port can't be changed.
The bandwidth limiting for portable oscilloscopes usually occurs after the channel switch so it applies to all inputs and there are no issue with matching between channels. I think this also helps with overload recovery. Since the trigger pickoffs occur before the channel switch and the vertical output happens in parallel with the trigger pickoff, triggering and the vertical output are not affected by bandwidth limiting.
There are some weird exceptions though:
The 2230 DSO is designed like earlier portable oscilloscopes which as a side effect means that DSO mode and triggering is not affected by the bandwidth limit. The 2232 which replaced it fixed this issue by moving the bandwidth limit to a spot earlier in the signal path and duplicating it for each channel. As a side effect though, its bandwidth limit affects DSO mode *and* triggering.
The 7000 mainframes implement the bandwidth limit before the internal channel switch because of their modular nature; their vertical plug-ins do not have access to that point. But since the signal and trigger paths separate in the plug-ins, some of them bandwidth limit the trigger and some do not. Even worse, on at least one plug-in, it depends on if it is an early or late version. The 7000 vertical output is picked off from the trigger signals after they are picked off from the vertical signals and selected which is nice since you can route any vertical signal to the vertical out with some limits whether it is displayed or not.
I don't know how much the rest of the scope path degrades the overall noise performance but the numbers suggest that the scope front end section has about a 20dB noise figure when set to 5mV/div. That seems pretty good to me.
I only mentioned it because it is something to watch for. The differential signal is converted to single ended for the vertical output and may suffer from low common mode rejection. My 7603 had a problem with this as the design only has 21 dB of common mode rejection leading to power supply ripple showing up on the vertical output at levels much higher than the noise level. From the schematic, it looks like the 465 is a little better at 30 dB.
The consensus I have seen is that the vertical output is intended for things like frequency counters where any noise and exact calibration is unimportant.
I am including photos of the vertical output noise on my 7603 before and after I improved the design a little bit. Note that the broadband noise level is not shown.