Well, I am officially giving up until by chance I either find another one or schematics. I found that yes, I can get a decent display but when you lock it there, the counter reads garbage. Hitting autoset, though there is no display, the counter reads the correct frequency. I know there could be separate problems, could all be just calibration, but I think by playing with it more I am just optimizing around the base problem.
As far as calibration, you need very specialized signal normalizers; time markers and levelers; and a host of other equipment that I doubt even Tektronix has at this late date. I was able to locate the calibration software and believe it or not, the proper rs232 cable. I'm able to run tests, load and save the calibration, etc. I tried loading the default factory calibration data but other than changing some measurements, it had no impact on the base triggering (or whatever) problem.
I'm going to keep an eye out for another one and use the amps in my DSA602 as planned. It's too bad as I think these were pretty capable lab-grade bench scopes in their prime.
Thanks for all the pointers along the way. By the way, I was thinking about posting some pictures from my DSA602 if anyone is interested. If you don't know, that machine takes the same vertical amps. The 602 is an interesting scope. It seems to have pretty high precision capabilities for its age, lots of match functions including convolution, FFT functions with the inverse, filtering, etc.
Jerry