I have TEA. Or GAS. I don't know which, but they taste the same.
It was a short road littered with excuses. My final project in college was to build a system to record data on cassette tapes, like the old Vic-20s. After many hours of watching Dave's videos I finally found an excuse to get me a lab too. It's for school. I wanted a good grade, after all, right? Right.
So I picked up an Extech 530 DMM. Then a pair of HP 3610s. An Instek SFG-1013. And the centerpiece of it all, a Rigol 1052E. My first scope. I was thrilled. I plastered excited pictures of it all over my Facebook. I literally slept with my arm around it the first night, and stared lovingly into that coveted display the next morning. You know your deep in it when you sleep with an oscilloscope.
Lab completed and project finished, I thought I was done. After watching countless dozens of Dave's videos, I finally found an excuse to expand the lab. What if I repaired broken power supplies from eBay and made some money? I want to make some money, after all, right? Right.
So I picked up an HP 34401 to trace shorts. A BK 8500 to properly load test. A Bob Parker ESR tester. A Hakko 888D. I also got the Rigol DG1022, because it had lots of buttons and was cheaper than I thought it would be. I finally set sail on my eBay journey.
Not that I needed all that for the trip. But once you get locked into a serious gear collection, the tendency is to take it as far as you can.
So I sold a handful of repaired HP supplies. Most were missing buttons I could get from Keysight, one needed the power switch re-soldered, and another wasn't broken at all. Two of them really got to me though. A 6031 with 1000W of power I couldn't imagine ever needing but wanted anyway. And a 3646 that I fell in love with, but broke again after fixing it. I wasn't sure if I'd be able to keep selling gear I really liked, so I quit.
Emotionally spent, I thought I was done. After watching hundreds of Dave's videos, I finally found an excuse to expand the lab. With all this gear, I might as well learn more about electronic design, after all, right? Right.
So I picked up The Art of Electronics and the Lab Course, as well as two boxes stuffed with components to go with it. I got my dad's old component bins, and 10 months of a subscription box brimming with microcontrollers, LCDs, sensors, radio modules, and gobs of other things.
Now the worst is yet to come. After coming against my beloved Rigol's limitations more than once, I've had my eye on a brand-new Keysight 3024 for months. And the cheeky bastards will give you a free 1102 if you buy one. I know I should sell it. I mean, what will I ever need 8 channels of oscilloscope for?
When I get this scope, I think I'm done. After watching nearly all of Dave's videos, I've finally found an excuse to expand the lab.
I hope there's room in the bed.