http://www.valuetronics.com/Details.asp ... ronix_465B
Haven't chewed thru them yet, but have more than you probably cared to know
Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal
Those 453's are great little scopes, cheap and easy to fix. IIRC they are the last of the 400 series that don’t use proprietary chips..skyboltone wrote:Way to go mister. I got the baby brother of that one....A 453....50 mhz.
Does everything I need it to do.
That's right! 20MHz is plenty.butwhatif wrote: btw, you don't need anything faster than a 20MHZ scope for audio work
Sounds good to me.d2camero wrote:He he - this should get some hackles up...
I use a USB scope. A 4 channel jobby from pico scope made for audio analysis.
I can do real time freq analysis, save the pictures, tweak and do it all again.
I can put in 4 probes throughout the circuit to see how the signal changes as it progresses throughout.
I can also do one-shots and freeze them on screen.
For a hobbyist this is probably overkill, but if you do a lot of audio analysis work it is great stuff.
I also have a two channel Tek scope that I use for quick checks.
d2
No. Thats just the stripes on the screen. The grid marks. You just change the volts per division with a knob. The 10 volts per division is easier and more intuitive to read. Unless you work in base 6 for some reason.gearhead wrote:I'm looking at a Tektronix 465; anyone have experience with that one? Can't seem to find any 453s; must be in a drought/wrong timing.
It's been eons since I used one. One of the spec diff's between the two that has me concerned is that the 453 has 10V per division, vs 465 is 6V per division.
With a 10x probe, that 100 and 60? For those 453 users, do you get close to pegging out the range? If so, the 465 might not do it.
Thanks all,
Dave