Scope Choice for Vintage Computer Troubleshooting

From: J.C. Wren <jcwren_at_jcwren.com>
Date: Mon Oct 7 13:58:01 2002

        "Huh? What? My 200Mhz, 2Gs/sec Tek TDS LCD scope works just fine thank
you..."

        Yea, and I bet you didn't pay $800 for it, either. I perhaps should have
expounded my distrust/distaste for the LCD scopes to more clearly say
"handheld" scopes. I had a TDS scope at IBM (4 actually), and I dearly
loved those things. They weren't *always* a substitute for a 2465B, but in
most cases they were.

        And, ironically, they run Windows 95... I did boot Linux on one much to
the consternation of the Tek guy, tho. Couldn't use it as a scope, but it
really paniced him to see the scope tore open, and a spare drive hanging out
of it. Oh yea, I also added a network card (supported under W95), and was
able to FTP files off to the server to backup images and configurations.

        --John

-----Original Message-----
From: cctalk-admin_at_classiccmp.org [mailto:cctalk-admin_at_classiccmp.org]On
Behalf Of steve
Sent: Monday, October 07, 2002 13:10
To: cctalk_at_classiccmp.org
Subject: RE: Scope Choice for Vintage Computer Troubleshooting



--- "J.C. Wren" <jcwren_at_jcwren.com> wrote:
> All LCD scopes are junk compared to a good tube
> scope. > LCDs scopes are a compromise. The
bandwidth is
> poor (though adequate for
> most 4Mhz systems), and do very poorly on dynamic
> signals. They're OK to
> capture a single image, but if you want to watch for
> jitter in a clock and
> such, they're useless.
>

Huh? What? My 200Mhz, 2Gs/sec Tek TDS LCD scope works
just fine thank you...

steve

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Received on Mon Oct 07 2002 - 13:58:01 BST

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