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my favorite way to see teardowns of this kind of equipment involves sledgehammers , c4 or steamrollers... In other words : A good widlarization ...
wow .. this predates the triggering circuit and the calibrated timebase....Not really--it is just a "dumbed down" version for students.The normal "Serviscope" had triggering & calibrated timebase,& was of similar vintage.my favorite way to see teardowns of this kind of equipment involves sledgehammers , c4 or steamrollers... In other words : A good widlarization ...I must say it looks pretty clean inside without obvious burn marks... must not have been used very often.
Lovely, the glow of valves in the dark .I've got a Hameg HM107 that's from the same era but yours is much more modern as it's even got a PCB. The Hameg is wired point to point on tag strips and tube sockets.Btw. have you noticed there's a sticker on one of the green caps saying MAR 1972. So not that old.
wow .. this predates the triggering circuit and the calibrated timebase....my favorite way to see teardowns of this kind of equipment involves sledgehammers , c4 or steamrollers... In other words : A good widlarization ...I must say it looks pretty clean inside without obvious burn marks... must not have been used very often.
Oh, how unkind The thing doesn't deserve that, even though it has no use whatsoever.You could turn it into a funky clock, then at least it does something usefull. Search for scope clock.