I like this episode, brings back memories. An other thing, there is a benchbrief about bandwidth problems caused by the delay line. Unwinding the coax and moving it a lot and repeat that over the whole length solves that
I had one and repaired it several times. 4 times a year until the friend I gave it too found the source. Mine was a 1976 model.
http://www.pa4tim.nl/?p=564Just things I remember.
About the uF, Most times in 60-70 stuff I've seen, they use uF, and some times mF. About nF you are right. On older stuff you see the use of use uuF instead of pF. Look at Tek manuals from that area, they are even nicer. By the way, The 1740 had a separate usermanual.
About the scope:
Mine showed several problems but one that came back more then once, was floodgun related. These scopes have no normal graticule lights. It uses the floodgun (but it looks very cool) A friend who has it now found the cause of problems. A hard to find cap in the floodgun circuit. It did not fail again since then. I twice had a burned floodgun resistor.
The boards are moved every time you push one of those bloody, always problems causing, latching pushbuttons.
On mine they gave problems with the solderjoints connecting the boards. But the switches themselves caused problems in my 576, several Philips meters and scopes and other gear. I hate those bloody things. Until I found out that K61 works best for me here.
Those big caps are often still better a new replacements but they can fail. I always measure ripple current too. During restaurations I remove and test them on leakage, capacitance and DF.
I always reseat parts in sockets. Especially in old Tek scopes from the 7000 series.
I never use freeze spray or a heatgun because I'm afraid the fast temp change due to the big temp difference, might kill parts like cracking tantalums or ceramic packages. Do you use it a lot ? I can be wrong here.
The dropping of all voltages is weird indeed, but I would check the HV from the crt too. That can cause strange troubles, and in this case the floodgun. In a 60's Philips sample scope the leaking doorknob HV caps caused very hard to find problems.
Those 1740's are really nice.