Burn this into a note and place it above your workbench. You would be nuts to spend $300 for an old Tek 22 series scope, even one in mint condition. For just a tiny bit more you can get any of several worthy modern beginners scopes, brand new.
You might be able to afford to do that, if you can and have reason to think you may need to use it a lot, do that you wont be sorry..
Otherwise, sit tight when you see expensive analog scopes. As a bit of patience will get you one for a lot less. You can bet on this as simply paying for the space to own old equipment represents a lot of money. Over time it makes the more compact equipment more valuable and the larger equipment less so.
Don't fall into the trap of paying too much, it will decrease your enjoyment. Any analog scope will die within a few years and replacing it may not be economical.
Got my mint condition 2211 for $75 on ebay and I love it. It has not been used much, was clean as a whistle. Still was in spec in every way. And I still get a decent amount of use out of it. But I know that eventually it will die.
And, unfortunately I still dont even have a service manual for it, (nor have I seen it for sale anywhere.) Its also too big to lug around when I move my work area which I do, living in a tiny home. So often it doesn't get used as much as it should. When I set up on the kitchen table I only get a few hours of time. And when its time to eat, my work bench has to go. I don't know how many geeks work like that.
Despite its size I still like it a lot. And having it has taught me a lot.
Its technically an analog scope with digital features but the fact is its basically an analog scope with digital readout and some very basic digital abilities.
If you are looking for a 22 series scope you should not pay a super lot for it because the CRT. Analog Tek or not, scopes when they die, they are very hard to fix because the CRTs.. are just old tech thats costly to replace. if you can even find them.. Also even though 2200 series are a bit smaller (not very) they are still big compared to a new scope, burn out eventually, and for a modern workbench, too big to be convenient. Its like a CRT monitor.
Although they dont weigh as much as one, its still a PITA.