Since the VCO kit really requires a scope to really check it out, I went to www.ebay.com and searched the current scope offerings. There were over 75 available, 95% would work for analog synth poking around. Here is a quick guide: 1) 50Mhz is all you need. 40 is OK, 20 is too slow, even for audio. Buy Tek if you can (Tektronics). 2) Avoid the following: HP: the HP17xx scopes are easily the worse product line in the history of HP. *trust me* military: requires 4 people to lift it. Dumont: tubes Heathkit or Eico: crappy & more crappy 3) Good buys: Philips (vastly underrated scopes), B&K Precision (had one for 8 years) Note that 99% of these DO NOT come with probes. Meduim quality, 50Mhz probes are about $35 ea. and you will need 2. 4) Best solution if you have LOTS of room: Tek 7000 series. In the mid-80s this was TEK's "flagship" line. You get a 'mainframe' (power supply and CRT) with room for 'plug-ins' (usually 4-wide). A dual-channel, 150Mhz delayed-sweep 7000 was $12,500 in 1984. Today, you can get the *exact* same configuration for $400!! What's the catch??? Well, they are *BIG*. About the size of 1 drawer in a filing cabinet. In other words, they are *DEEP*. I mean like 28 inches deep. But, if you have the space (depth-wise) these puppies rock the scope world. I use a TEK TAS250 (2 ch, 50Mhz, no delayed sweep) for all MOTM check-out. This is a smaller, lightweight portable scope. I bought a "demo" unit off the web from a liquidator for $400. It was *brand new in the box*! This was a $1300 new scope. I also have a TEK TDS380 2Ghz , 450Mhz sampling scope. I won't say how much THAT cost: let's say that *replacement* probes are $395 each!!! I you find something, and want me to go look at it, send me the URL of the page (ebay has a cute feature that does this). Paul Schreiber
Message
Oscilloscopes
1999-02-03 by Paul Schreiber
Attachments
- No local attachments were found for this message.