I really don't believe that the SMD technology is as good as the TH tech is. Its primary reason is to reduce the amount of labour required in the production process and secondly to make someone far more money as result of less labour costs and also lower components cost. Yes there is also the spin off in as much as it reduces the physical size of the final product and that suits a lot of people, not least the consumer in a lot of cases.
It tends to get way to complicated for its own good, eg FPGA is a classic example and then there is level of software integration that a lot of things rely on to function correctly, a bit too much ripple on the supply line and it freezes or crashes out all together or other such matters that simply was not there a few years ago.
Things are just these days sometimes too complicated for their own good and as a result often fail in service. I love to go military airshows and these days becoming all too common at such events for a booked and advertised plane not to make it to the show at all because it went "tech" at the last minute.
Bd139 said awhile ago that his meter was a 4.5 digit one because that was adequate for his requirements and I tend to agree with that. I have a 6.5 digit meter and what do I tend to use the most?, either a 4 digit handheld or a 4.5 digit bench meter, why, because the 6.5 digit one is just way to complicated for general day to day use and in practise the extra resolution it affords in reality is not justified for the vast majority of users, it is a vanity thing, bragging rights etc. I got it because it looks very impressive all those digits and precision it affords but the fact is I don't need it, nothing I do justifies it in any shape or form but I still have and I expect that I'm far being the only one who can say that.
Well not strictly true with respect to SMD. It's a matter of frequency and parasitics more than anything else. You have to make stuff smaller and with less parasitic inductance (leads) and capacitance (encapsulation/construction) to push frequency up. A TH resistors is only a resistor for a relatively low frequency span. If you think of a typical RF termination for example, say 50 ohms, that TH resistor might have 1pF of capacitance. At 2.4GHz, that's ~70? impedance from that capacitor in parallel with your 50 ohm resistor. It's not 50 ohms any more and your transmission line is no longer terminated and/or you have an unexpected filter with the transmission line impedance. This is pretty heavily apparent in pretty much every circuit I've built upwards of about 50MHz. I built a couple of 2m (144MHz) receivers (DC+superhet single conversion) and even at that relatively low speed they are touchy as fuck about impedances. My little naff 40m DC receiver is even sensitive to shielding placement at 7MHz.
Your 1740A's hybrids are the other option which is basically an encapsulated SMD board. In fact some people have replaced hybrids in Philips scopes with a few SMD parts
Smaller, faster, less power, cheaper, more reliable. This is sacrificing only maintenance. I've got to jump on it because I can't argue with it. I prefer TH dead bug myself but it doesn't scale to the requirements of products these days.
FPGAs are quite reliable, well Xilinx ones anyway. We put them in flying exploding things. I rather like them if I'm honest - they also weigh a lot less than the 50 odd tubes of 74LS/HC logic I have in the cupboard. Disclaimer: when I was at university VHDL and FPGAs were the thing of the hour.
As for 4.5 digits, it's good enough for most cases. I'll pick up a 34401A if I see one going cheap but it's not because it's 6.5 digits but because it's Keysight/Agilent/HP
Ah yeah i had a look on ebay and indeed the DSO6000 scopes are going a bit high lately. Tho a used X3000 is just as good if you patiently watch for a good deal to come around.
Probes aren't that big of a issue tho since the probes you get with these scopes are the lowest end probes they make. They can be had for a reasonable price and they are not bad probes at all. The more problematic are the digital MSO probes, those can be quite rare and expensive. On top of that there are multiple types, so you need to get the right one for your scope family.
As for buying a new model i think its reasonably safe with Keysight since they aren't known that much for shipping buggy products(Well sure they did have a occasional slip up but its rare). But on some of the chinese test gear manufacturers there have been some pretty major problems, sometimes they would get fixed a long time later with a software patch, some not and some might be hardware issues.
I learned about the history of the U1272A right after purchasing an older one. Even though it seems to be an amazing meter, the repeated problems and recall don't do much for the confidence. At least they took the high road, maybe after a few "nudges" from the customers at large.
Any references for the U1272A problems? I got a U1241C so I'm worried now