The test equipment purchase I was looking forward to turned into quite a disappointment last night. I was really looking forward to this curve tracer.
I scrounged out and tested a set of PNP and NPN transistors out of a junk box, packed a couple of multimeters and a portable scope into the truck, picked up a friend who decided to come along at the train station, stopped at the bank, got a coffee, then headed out to the seller's place where he had it set up ready to go on a work table in his garage.
The power light came on and the CRT displayed a dot in the middle of the screen and there was humming but no fan noise. I couldn't get any deflection on the CRT by turning either of the position knobs or by throwing the -10 division test switches, and then the dot faded out after a minute or two. This was not off to a good start so we switched off and I asked it it was ok to take the covers off and see if there were any visual indications of problems inside. I was a bit concerned because the two covers were bulged out of the front by the plastic clips that are supposed to turn inside to hold the covers on, not outside of the frame as they were in this case.
First off, two of the rubber mounts for the fan had rotted away and it had fallen in. Luckily it only jammed and hadn't shorted out a selenium rectifier behind it. We moved the fan outside the back of the case so it could spin freely once stood on something.
My friend noticed the missing tubes before I did. It's hard to see from the picture I took from the side but there are a bunch of tubes missing from the underside of the top chassis. That would explain no deflection since about 9 tubes total were missing from the sweep and stairstep generation circuits. Someone at some point in time raided it for tubes and then did a slapdash job of forcing the case closed not bothering to do it properly since they must've figured it was junk after they poached the tubes they wanted.
Since the seller had already powered it up several times for us, for pictures, at a garage sale on his street, and it had time to cool down from the brief first power up, we attempted another startup again now that the fan was out of the way to investigate the dimming CRT display issue. At least the fan ran freely. I got a measurement on the -150V reference of about -128V and the CRT dimmed right out again after a minute, so the high voltage is failing quickly whether it's the high voltage transformer at fault or something else.
Nobody knows who or when the piece of tape labelled "Works" was put on the front but the curve tracer cannot have worked once the missing tubes were removed somewhere along the way and the CRT high voltage supply failing in the first 1-2 minutes of runtime, setting aside the issue of the fan which could've fallen while the unit was in dead storage. I don't know what kind of storage conditions it was in but the machine was in far dirtier condition than I expected based on the photos. If it was an issue of getting the fan remounted and sourcing the missing tubes in order to get started, I might have considered taking it on, but not with the possible bad high voltage transformer.
The friend and I went for dinner after and we enjoyed a nice long countryside drive on the back roads on the way home. Dropped him off at his place and then I went home still feeling pretty disappointed because I really was looking forward to that curve tracer but it just didn't work out with the condition it turned out to be in.