Some more TEA !
Last week I found a cute little thing here. A rather intriguing old looking portable scope. It looked very weird, but somehow I was attracted to it... in good nick and working, 30 Euros + 10 for shipping.. not much to lose, and first time I see one for sale... so I didn't want to let it pass.
Then I searched a bit about it... it's a very early handheld scope, late '80s, made by " Createc " , a German company.
For its age, given the specs and features that it sports, I think it must have been pretty state of the art back then.
At the least Tektronix though it was, as they rebranded it to sell it !
Tekwiki page:
https://w140.com/tekwiki/wiki/T202There are several models I gather, depending on bandwidth. 5 or 10 or 20MHz I think.
Mine is model " SC 04 ", it's the 10MHz version.
2 channels, 20MS/s, H/W frequency counter and H/W DMM ! :-O
Also a serial port where you can attach a little printer for hardcopies !
don't have it sadly... but there is a thread for this scope on EEVBlog with tear down pics, where the guy show the printer in action:
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/vintage-handheld-scope-createc-sc04/Maybe the serial port can be used for other purposes, will have to see if I can find the user (even service ?) manual for it.
It's not very usable because the user interface is completely fucked up. It's alien. I don't think it's been designed by human beings... or at least not intended to be used by them. It's NOT intuitive AT ALL. Thank God my scope came with a cute little "quick reference " chart (albeit for model SC 02 not 04 but still useful) that describes the most commonly used key combinations to set things like time base or trigger.
The only intuitive thing that you don't need a PhD in astrophysics to use, are the input couplings and attenuators settings, because they have mega huge dedicated mechanical slide switches along the edges of the case. Channel one on left side, Ch2 on the right side. Don't think you can at least figure out where the Power On button is .. because there isn't even one !
Told you, not intuitive...
After a bit, I managed to display a 10kHz sine wave.. I was over the moon, felt like I had just passed a difficult exam at school or something !
It doesn't seem to want to display a graticule on the screen so not sure how one is supposed to measure anything with this thing ! I guess there must be a way to display it... but it ought to be on by default eh ?!
Another reason it's not really a usable / practical scope is... well it looks like a portable scope but it's not ! It's handheld shall we say but... it is not battery powered, comes with a big power brick ! One with a weird looking proprietary connector and 7 pins which are all used : So I am glad I have the brick or else... the SCOPE would itself would become a brick as well !
Quick teardown piccies of the power brick because that other thread doesn't show any.
It's a mix of linear and switch mode. First there is a potted transformer (in blue, left inside the case), probably to lower the voltage a bit and allow for 110/220 V selection. Then there is a switch mode supply around good old TI 494 PWM controller chip, same as many Tek 2000 series scopes.
The DMM feature is nice. It runs full screen and displays a handful of parameters like Vpp, Vrms, Period and Frequency, taken from the H/W counter. However refresh rate is like 2 seconds or so, so it drove me a bit crazy I must admit...
But it does look cool and even show you a miniature view of the real time scope view of the signal, in the bottom right corner of the screen, so you can keep an eye on your signal while looking at the DMM !
So.... overall, it's such a pain to use and not even battery powered, that I highly doubt I would use it very often. Still want a more modern portable scope...
However I am very happy to have it, as it completes my collection of Tek scopes, and is my first "portable" one. Also nice to have as it's so ancient, it's great to see just how much features and performance people managed to cram into such a small form factor so early on, in through-hole technology !!
90% of it is TH ! I see 3 boards stacked on top of one another. The two biggest ones are TH. Only the outer one, facing the back of the unit, has a few SMD parts on it...
Actually my unit works really just fine, I have nothing to tweak or fix and improve, electrically... almost boring !
OTHO, for the better, because given the construction of the scope, serviceability / repairability is next to NIL !
so I think the goal with this scope is just have some fun with it. To begin with I could try to mkae it look nicer. It's case has SEVERELY yellowed as you can see, looks horrible. Could try some hardcore "retro-brighting" on it to rejuvenate it.
Could try to investigate the printer side : can I find a printer for it ? Is the printer protocol proprietary, or can it wok with some generic serial printer ? Can the UART be used to do some stuff other than printing ?
Could I design / make a battery pack for it, to make it more usable ? The sticker at the back says it draws only 3,7W. So should be able to power it for an hour with battery that's not too big. OF course there are 7 different wires coming from the power brick, so I would need to design my own power supply to generate all these rails... hopefully in a much more compact design, thanks to SMD magic and modern componentry...
So that could be a nice little project : studying the existing power brick, reverse-engineering it, then designing a modern replacement, SMD and much more compact.
I don't know... just basically play around this old scope !
Now for some piccies...