Looks like a handheld scope.
I knew a guy who used an nspire. Kind of a neat machine, but it's to the point of I'd rather use a computer with Maple, MATLAB or at least decent open source alternatives (of which there are a few).
my hard working oldie laboratory is proudly presenting
THE PLOTTER MOVIE
Please do not watch it by handy when you have to pay for the download data, it requires 1GB. (we love full HD + quality)
http://www.wellenkino.de/video/54601A_7475A.mp4
greetings
Martin
That is positively delicious. One doesn't usually think "organic" when talking about printers, but plotters are the exception that proves the rule. I love 'em in all their incarnations.
Well played!
Nobody hates a kitten.
One pissed in my scope once and then went for my eldest and scratched her face up. She was 1. That was the last cat we ever had. Fuck cats and kittens. Nasty nasty animals. They kill all the wildlife, bring dead stuff into the house and carry nasty diseases like toxoplasma gondii, leave hairs over everything, walk all over your shit while you're in the middle of it and cost a fortune to keep running.
I like my neighbor's cat. She runs over to greet me when I get home from work. I play with her when I'm out working in the yard. I don't have to feed her or take her to the vet. She doesn't climb on my stuff, pee in my ear when I'm sleeping, leave hairballs in the middle of the hall, etc., etc. It is an ideal way to "have" a pet.
I like my neighbor's kids for analogous reasons.
I'll bring mine over to your house and they can all have a play date.
mnem
"Insanity is hereditary; you get it from your children."
As long as you take 'em home again, I am good with that.
I spent a couple of hours building the TM500 extender kit and tomorrow will resume working my way through the pile of plug-ins I've acquired over the last couple of months. It will be such a pleasure to not have to work on stuff while it is in the frame. And it should distract me from looking for a level sine generator and oscilloscope to add to the mix, at least for a week or two. Plus it will be a good way to warm up before tackling the 475A rehab, including the dreaded hunt-the-tants step.
I knew a guy who used an nspire. Kind of a neat machine, but it's to the point of I'd rather use a computer with Maple, MATLAB or at least decent open source alternatives (of which there are a few).
I had one of the earlier nSpire CAS machines. The one with the green buttons. It was like using medical equipment not a calculator. Didn’t like the interface at all!
I was actually given it by a TI89 user who didn’t like it and went back to his TI89.
Nearly into the Top 10 Topics (by Views) but languishing near the bottom of most thanked threads.
Who hasn't thanked the OP bitseeker ?
Get onto it !
Nearly into the Top 10 Topics (by Views) but languishing near the bottom of most thanked threads.
Who hasn't thanked the OP bitseeker ? Get onto it !
Can't do that on my phone via Tapatalk [emoji48]
Plus I expect that we all tend to say thanks directly in messages rather than with the link?
I knew a guy who used an nspire. Kind of a neat machine, but it's to the point of I'd rather use a computer with Maple, MATLAB or at least decent open source alternatives (of which there are a few).
I had one of the earlier nSpire CAS machines. The one with the green buttons. It was like using medical equipment not a calculator. Didn’t like the interface at all!
I was actually given it by a TI89 user who didn’t like it and went back to his TI89.
Hah! I wonder why...
I think these kind of calculators (HP has a similar one out, the HP Prime) are bordering on overkill for a handheld device. If I'm doing things that require those capabilities in a calculator, I'm probably going to choose to use a computer and much more capable software. [edit] things like solving systems of differential equations...fuck doing that on a calculator. Maple all the way.
I got me a winner!
Restored my HP 4276A LCZ meter and went so far as to recreate an option board for it from scratch and service manual schematics.
It all seems to work well which came as a surprise.....
I saw your thread in the repair forum; that is a very nice specimen. I've been thinking that I need a good LCR/Z meter for my lab...that or something from GenRad is high on my list.
I like my neighbor's cat. She runs over to greet me when I get home from work. I play with her when I'm out working in the yard. I don't have to feed her or take her to the vet. She doesn't climb on my stuff, pee in my ear when I'm sleeping, leave hairballs in the middle of the hall, etc., etc. It is an ideal way to "have" a pet.
As a fellow proprietor of a Timeshare Kitty, I heartily concur!
Subject: "If it ain't broke don't fix it". I completely agree with and endorse this general rule. But like every rule there are exceptions. IMHO here are 2 exceptions....
The Tek 2445/2465/2467 PSU. Due to it's design troubleshooting this PSU in place is a near impossible task. And to troubleshoot it outside the case would require an extensive array of load resistors. I think it's prudent to do a complete re-cap of both the Inverter/Regulator boards as insurance against failure. It's a lot of capacitors and it's time consuming. But the results are worth it. I've done it twice now and in both cases the operation was successful and the patient lived.
I've done three now. In the first a Rifa shorted, detonating the series resistor. While in there, I replaced the electrolytics. In the other two I replaced the Rifas before they detonated, and did the electrolytics at the same time.
I've also replaced the A5 SMD electrolytics (and a surprisingly-far-away resistor).
But I haven't replaced any other components on the various boards, unless they were demonstrably faulty.
Tek 4XX beaded tantalum capacitors. I agree with mnem. They are the devil and kill kittens. In my limited experience with these scopes I've had 3 short and 1 explode. As a result I give them no quarter. They have to go. Tomorrow I will start on the newly acquired 475A despite the fact that it works perfectly. I want to have some assurance and confidence that it will continue to do so.
I've had one 15V tant on a 13V line go in a 485. Other than that I've had more problems with conventional electrolytics including some of the obscenely expensive axial tants spewing track-destroying crap.
I'll replace the tant beads as part of fault localisation, but not more.
Yeah the axial tants (solid) are nasty. They tend to explode I find. They burn up before they explode so you can replace them if you keep an eye out. Also damn expensive to replace so they just get electrolytics in there.
Yeah the axial tants (solid) are nasty. They tend to explode I find. They burn up before they explode so you can replace them if you keep an eye out. Also damn expensive to replace so they just get electrolytics in there.
If I limited myself to the in-stock items, I would have needed a couple of these: were
https://www.digikey.co.uk/product-detail/en/vishay-sprague/M39006-22-0554/1012-1009-ND/2773715 At a mere £45 each, I think damn expensive is an understatement.
Even such axial electrolytics are a pain to find.
You can usually find them on ebay for around £4 a go which is much more reasonable but still to expensive and you don't know where they have been.
Have a look for Vishay 021 ASM on CPC. Affordable axials. £0.85 a go for a 220uF 40V one in same dimensions which may do the job ok. If I need lower ESR I stick a 100n to 1uF X7R ceramic across them under the board. If the feedback loop of whatever it is across is well compensated it works fine.
https://cpc.farnell.com/vishay/mal202137221e3/capacitor-220uf-40v/dp/CA05088
https://www.ebay.com/itm/132795146843
Here's one for you calcnutters...
mnem
"Can you link me the MAN pages on that?"
Wow that looks very interesting indeed but I bet that it could be a real bastard as well with dodgy contacts to the keyboards hmm.... [emoji848]
Yeah, but the idea of a different physical interface depending on application is actually pretty interesting. And it looks like it's about as well-engineered as it could be, given the realities of mass-production. I'm just thankful I don't have a NEED for such things anymore.
There's
a whole wiki on the damn things... a pretty interesting niche, specifically designed for school use, even to the point of having a "testing" mode where access to a users macros and scripting is completely disabled for a period of time. Of course, like any customizable tool, you find uses for it long after you leave the halls of academe.
Nearly into the Top 10 Topics (by Views) but languishing near the bottom of most thanked threads.
Who hasn't thanked the OP bitseeker ? Get onto it !
Dunno that it will be possible to raise that by much... the
"Thanks!" list is based upon "unique user" count, and while we may be one of the most prolific threads on Dave's blog, this is pretty much entirely the work of a very few, very noisy individuals with entirely too much
free unallocated time on their hands.
mnem
Anyone not see their names here
The following users thanked this post: all_repair, TiN, videobruce, StuUK, hammy, xrunner, JoeO, AF6LJ, tautech, saposoft, zucca, RJFreeman, blueskull, Brumby, nugglix, sixtimesseven, gnavigator1007, jakeisprobably, mnementh, neo, Daruosha, AlanS, CalMachine, bjcuizon, frozenfrogz, Jacon, Electro Detective, cosenmarco, bd139, CNe7532294, beanflying, imo, Manuauto, tardsat, Kosmic, umbro, slbender, Oculus, Specmaster + the formally recalcitrant ones: Oculus, Specmaster, Cerebus
*sigh*
Miss your wit, ya cagey ol' reprobate. *Raises a glass of Apricot brandy to absent friends*mnem
*toddles off to do battle with the
JENGA-fied Garage of Doom*