Notice on the storage board that only one bulk decoupling capacitor is used per supply voltage while lots of small ceramic decoupling capacitors are distributed around the board.
I was goingto say they were miniature tantalum, being yellow and in a dipped package, but of course it would not make sense. BOM is there to remind me...
So, these tiny cute yellow dipped are ceramic not tantalum. I always thought Tantalum had the monopoly for yellow dipped packages, somehow ! LOL [hiding in the corner]
Tektronix used aluminum electrolytic capacitors here because they were cheaper and sufficient.
I guess even expensive gear need to be pragmatic and count beans if the company making them is to make a profit...
There is no reason you cannot do that except for the increased cost.
I just received the news caps in the mail. That was quick, happy with their service...
I actually ordered both 10uF and 33uF, not knowing what your reply might be...
In the end I ended up using the 10uF ones, simply because they had the correct 5.08mm pitch, and had a lower profile which made them unlikely to ever kiss the case while opening the scope, which looked like what caused the death of that electrolytic. The 33uF ones had their legs spread too far apart, and bent outward at sharp angles. Bending them back to a narrower pitch proved to be ugly and stressed the leads. So, 10uF it would be. Replaced all 6 of them of course.
Then powered up the the scope, gave it a quick sanity check in both analog and storage mode... had somehow to again tweak a couple trimmers there, nothing that worried me that much (vertical a tad, and horizontal offset a fair more bit, not sure why). All was fine. Then screwed the back plate to the underside of the digital board, and secured the digital board back down to the chassis, quick check again, still fine, then put the scope cover back on, been a long time ! Getting there... I thought. what a fool. Then checked the scope again, for the 3rd time in 5 minutes... still fine in analog mode... then switched to store mode, uh what's going on ?! No ! Moving the trace up and down produces a funny result ! It does move no worries but there is some "ghosting" for want of a better term. It produces a vertical "comb" pattern, like a paint running on a wall or something ! Weird.
Made a clip of it to illustrate :
https://youtu.be/YKeMm_kueGkSuddenly it reminded me seeing a similar behavior a year ago, when I acquired that scope and played with the store mode to get a feel for it.
Then a couple minutes later, the "comb" was gone and the trace was fine again, phew... then 2 more minutes later.... back to troubles : the trace this time had completely vanished/disappeared from teh screen ! Shows up perfectly fine in analog mode, no worries, but as soon as I switch to storage mode, the readout show up just fine no problem there, but the signal trace is nowhere to be found ! As if it's brightness control were turned all the way down, and/or the scope was not triggering properly... except I don't think it's any of that since the "trigger'd" LED on the front panel is appropriately lit (and it just uses the same settings as the analog mode anyway, which does work/display the trace just fine).
So... I think... this scope.... despite all the time and effort I have put in it in the last 6 weeks... does NOT like me ?! Can a scope ever show GRATITUDE to its loving and caring owner ? .... grrr.... or maybe I am misinterpreting his wil... maybe he does love me, so much, soooo much that he is afraid that I might stop looking at him the moment he is healthy again ?! I didn't think psychology had a place in electronics...
Anyway, I am puzzled ! Will I ever see the end of this repair ?
I am trying to see the bright side of things (scope SMPS fixed, "working" again)... but I am finding it hard presently...
Sooooo.... back to school again. What could be wrong ?
Logic has it that the problem is related to the last thing I touched... the caps ? Hmmm... don't think so, because of everything you said, and also of course because as I said I tested storage mode right after replacing the caps, and all was fine.
So my second best hypothesis would relate to that X offset trimmer. I had to adjust it, quite a bit (was a full division off) but I didn't get WHY it was that I had to touch it... why would it have moved during my repair ? I didn't touch it or even think about him, and I don't quite see how I could have moved it by accident !
I also found it strange/worrying that I had to rotate that trimmer all the way to the left in order to adjust the readout&trace, and even then it was still a tad not quite there yet, so had to finish it off by slightly adjusting the analog control counter part on the front panel, which I didn't judge quite normal...
So me thinks, maybe the trace disappearing might be the X offset circuitry going bad. Maybe that trimmer is defective, or has bad solder joints, goes open circuit and that makes the trace fly off the screen all the way to the left or right.
Will have to open the scope again and check the trimmer up close. Will also check the schematic to see how the X offset circuitry is put together, see if my theory would be possible at all.
While I am doing that, if anyone has any ideas about this strange "comb"/ghost pattern when I move the trace up and down ? Maybe a know problem, or a common issue in digital scopes at large, of that era, all brands included ?
So again.... NEVER a dull moment with that scope !!!