Hey guys and girls,
I've been meaning to get to this, but here's the (incomplete) teardown to my newly acquired scope, which is as you might have noticed, a Tektronix 465M. I got it for $70 shipped off of eBay. Took a chance on this one.
The 465M is not so much a relative to the popular 465 and 465B as it is the 455. The 455 and 465M are almost identical apart from a few internal differences granting it 100MHz bandwidth vs the 455's 50MHz bandwidth. The 465M is also supposed to be a "military" model. It is quite rugged, though I'm not sure what constitutes "military". (I guess that's what the M stands for). Additionally, speaking of "Ms", this is a modular oscilloscope, which means that the horizontal and vertical modules can (pretty)easily be swapped out if need be, which makes servicing quite a bit easier...and if it's a complete disaster, the entire module can be replaced.
A few other things to note. This is a fanless unit! There is a big aluminum heatsink on the back. My photo of the back came out like crap, so I didn't upload it, but you can imagine (or Google) it. This translates into having almost no dust within the scope, which is great for things like switches, and keeping the components from overheating.
It also uses a green PCB as opposed to the brown/tan types that Tek had been using for a few decades before. I'm not sure if the brown PCBs that had previously been used were paper-type boards or lesser quality, but I'm really digging the green!
This scope is
really serviceable. Apart from the HV stuff which I probably won't touch unless someone guides me through it, there is barely a part on here that couldn't be replaced. Pretty much all of the parts with numbers on them are from top-notch American manufacturers, including Sprague, Bourns, Clarostat, Spectrol, Dale, etc. Really good stuff. None of that Chinese crap that you see in a lot of today's equipment. However, this was around a $3000 scope back in the day.
So really good stuff. I can't really find anything wrong with it as of now. Haven't done too many checks, but everything seems to work pretty dandy. I might replace some of the pots and clean a switch or two, but the stuff that doesn't have any moving parts seems pretty set!
Pictures didn't come out quite as nicely as I would have liked. I was using my old camera and it's macro function isn't as swift as I thought it was. But none the less, I did my best. I might try retaking a lot of the pictures with my good camera and uploading them. I was just lazy and didn't want to empty the SD card.:p There is a pretty awesome teardown of the 465M located here:
http://www.controlelectronics.com.au/used/tek465m/465m-images.html