I've recently acquired Tektronix 2213 on a car boot sale in a pretty good condition (apart from blown 250v-rated X-capacitors in PSU). Seems to work well, but it produces terrible 50Hz hum, very loud. After taking it apart and finding a service manual it appeared that I am unlucky owner of an old version of the device, equipped with so called "Current Limit" preregulator. The hum comes from a big inductor that looks like a mains transformer; it seems to produce quite powerful magnetic field that I can feel with a steel scredriver if I put it close to the choke (after removing a metallic screen).
It seems that this magnetic field causes screen vibration and very loud sound.
Questios:
1. Is is normal ?
After about an hour of working everything seems to be fine, nothing burns, PSU is just a little bit hot. Just in case I've checked electrolytic capacitors in PSU, they are well in specs, including ESR. Dumb checking of semiconductors doesn't look attractive to me...
If I power the scope from 110V AC from autotransformer, the noise is much less audible.
My guess is that version of "preregulator" I have (based on IRF730), chops part of the sine wave to provide stable voltage output amplitude independent from input (100-240V AC).
2. What shall I do then ?
2.1 Currently I incline to removing screen from the inductor (it vibrates) and mounting choke to the rear panel with some soft padding. This will increase 50Hz magnetic field near it. On the other hand, the CRT is well screened already and is quite far away.
2.2 I couldn't find the schematics of this scope's PSU with the preregulators.. What is the role of this inductor (it seems to be in series with mains) ? Just filtering the noise from preregulator and SMPS ? or something more complicated, like AC current source (it seems to have quite large inductance, about 13mH... ok, less than 1 Ohm @ 50Hz ). Don't want to experiment with shorting it
2.3 powering the scope via 230->110v autotransformer, it's another brick under the table...
It would be interesting to see the shape of the current the scope consumes from mains, but it would involve play with isolating transformers..
Any ideas ?
Thanks in advance !