Hi, all!
after being assured by bitseeker that I'm right at the TEA board here I post my second posting on the eevblog forum.
I'm glad to be here amongst others with similar problems explaining others what you need all those gear for.
I have to confess that I'm addictive to test equipment.
It startet all out that I wanted to repair a pioneer cassette deck CT-900S (change motor and most rubber pieces of the drive) and a kenwood DP-8020 cd-player.
That was three years ago.
I had a philips PM5134 function generator and a hameg 203 oscilloscope then.
I soon discovered that the PM5134 was not stable enough: it would change its frequency over hours and didn't reach a stable working point. I had to check that and I sniped a philips PM6680 frequency counter cheap on ebay to check the frequency.
I got carried away...
I realised the frequency counter needed a stable reference, too, since mine "only" had a tcxo. So I bought several oxco's from china and Russia for little money.
Also I had to replace my function generator because using my PM6680 I now knew how unstable it is.
I kept it because even if unstable its ok as an external sweep source for another (stable) function generator for example.
I came across a HP3325B with option 002 (high voltage output) for little money from the US (I got it for the price of shipping plus shipping..). It was offered as not working properly. After cracking it open I could not believe that inside some of the coax-patch-cables were not connecting the points they should have been.
I put the cables back in the right places and the HP3325 worked fine!
Beeing already aware at that point that I needed a precise reference of 10 MHz I looked for a trimble gpsdo and finally got one cheap, also from china.
In the mean time I had acquired a PM6307 wow and flutter meter and even a reference tape with 3 kHz and 3.5 kHz test tones, but I haven't used those ever since.
I got carried away...
A second frequency counter (PM6685) found its way to me from ebay and I started to check oxco's and calibrated my two frequency counters.
I reached the possibilities of my old hameg 203 (20MHz) oscilloscope and went for a philips PM3065 (100MHz bandwidth) from bundeswehr surplus. I already had encountered the eevblog forum and several other forums and came across that I could further improve my home lab in the field of such basic things like power supplies, especially the HP6632B. I only had a simple, self-made power supply with 25V/3A cc/cv. But only 20V on the HP6632B? I could not stand an offer for two fully working HP 6643A (option J11:40V/5A) for 170$ each..
The HP6632B had a defective controller board that I had to repair but I lost the calibration data. My best DMM was a fluke 85 III.
I got carried away...
An ERMIC G-1006.500 voltmeter was offered on ebay for 50Euro and I was the only bidder.
The G-1006.500 is the best voltmeter ever designed and built by former Volkseigener Betrieb RFT in the german democratic republic.
It is driven by a clone of an intel controller, by the way.
Because the GDR had no high-resolution ADC available, the G-1006.500 had many ranges to cover 200mV to 1000V and 200mOhm to 200MOhm with 4,5 digits resolution down to 10µV/10µOhm on the last digit.
Its impedance is >10G in the ranges up to 20V and above that it is >10M.
Summed up, it's an impressive peace of gear but the time had gone over it.
After the iron curtain fell in 1989 it became clear it was not competitive to western lab voltmeters at the time.
The test gear department of RFT, re-founded as ERMIC in the BRD, closed in the first half of the 1990s.
I liked the G-1006.500 even though I grew up in the BRD.
Many peoply in the former BRD looked down on everything in the GDR. I did never share that because having relatives in the GDR.
The people in the GDR achieved impressive things under the circumstances they were living in/with.
The G-1006.500 was well designed and built in a way that it achieved the accuracy of western voltmeters but lacked the resolution as a consequence of the embargo in the technical fields.
Ok, I enjoyed to explore the G-1006.500 and also its limitations. In the end I sold it because of its size (19", 3U high, full depth) and weight of 15kg. Before I sold it, I bought a HP 3456A. Also "only" a voltmeter.
But I had to measure current to calibrate the HP6632B, remember?
I got carried away...
A HP3457A found its way to me over the atlantic from canada. Quiet a nice pice of kit. It was ok for calibrating the voltage part of the HP6632B but I realised I needed a reference resistor of 1.1k for the current. Ok, it doesn't have to be precisely 1.1k if I can measure its value accurately enough. At that point I discovered how noisy the HP3457A is in comparison to the HP3456A.
I already had specified for me that
- frequency-related test gear has to contain a 10Mhz reference input
- all test gear has to contain a GPIB port. (Only my PM6685 lacks a GPIB port but I'm working on it..)
I had hope to limit my TEA by that. I was wrong.
I got carried away...
Some day I came across an ebay-offer for several HP 3488A for 45Euro that I couldn't resist. I bought two of them.
Over several weeks also modules for those found its way to me. More than those two HP3488A can take..
Ok, I keep them as spare and for flexibility.
I acquired an USB to GPIB adapter and loads of GPIB cable and can now control my test gear and read results using python.
As I'm no professional programmer I have still much (almost everything) to learn in this field.
Eventually, I don't remember when, I won an HP4263A LCR meter.
My most recent acquisitions are another (my third) HP3456A voltmeter and a precision resistor decade 0.01-11111.1Ohm.
And 5x Agilent 8762B coaxial switches DC - 18 GHz.
Did you notice something?
Yep. I haven't repaired the cassette deck neither the cd-player yet.
I bought a used but working DP-8020 and put the defective one aside, still awaiting repair (since I have all parts needed lying around).
At an early stage I only had TEE but now it has become TEA, I'm afraid.
I think I got serious GAS in combination with ESD and DMM (wait: duplicate? multiple!
-> MMM).
Writing here gives me some relief.
Oha, I forgot: The calibrators.
First I bought one from Ian Johnston. It's my portable voltage reference and I like it very much.
A few month ago I made a low offer on ebay that was accepted to my surprise. I now own a Knick JS 3010 5,5 digit DC voltage and current calibrator with 10nV - 140V and 10nA - 200mA maximum. Its the version with higher accuracy of 0.001%.
I now think about a 3458A (leasing a calibrated one, it's to expensive for me to own one) for calibrating all my stuff to a valid standard for an acceptable amount of money..
I attached some photos showing most of my test gear on a shelf above my home-lab desk. The HP3325A has to sit under the table, because of its size and weight.
I'm running out of space a little bit but that's more a challenge than an obstacle.
It's not the end of my disease, I assume.