I got the 60 Mhz version. I bought it brand new in 1985. It cost as I remember $1,200 US. I still use it today. Before I got it I had a couple of junkie scope with vacuum tubes. I spent more time trying to get the scope working then I did experimenting on a circuit. So I worked all summer at minimum wage to save up for my first brand new solid state Tektronix 2213A. I'm sure my parents thought I was crazy. Today's oscilloscope without a CRT seems lifeless. After all these years I still love my Tektronix 2213A. It seems heard to believe you can get a scope like this for around 100 bucks.
@@shyleshsrinivasan5092 I really love the features and such of my Siglent SDS1204X-E but it doesnt see a whole lot of use because I just love my Tektronix analog scopes. My 2252 sees daily use and my 2235 and Protek P3502C see almost daily use as backup scopes.
I am just starting out on my new hobby at 58 and I bought one of these from ebay, your tutorial has really taken the uncertainty away, great job, thanks from the UK.
Thank you! I was just given this scope by a fellow ham operator and I am so excited as I have always wanted one for my lab. Your videos on the 2225 are a fantastic resource for me!
I just got an old hitachi scope on ebay for $12 and it's very old but works well. I took Dave's advice and it's been a good learning experience for me.
got my first lab piece 2225 for $55.00, spent all day fixing it. so happy but need to buy probes and stuff to calibrate it. My board is brighter green and the display as well. Thanks Dave so much
I used to have a job calibrating scopes. Textronix was my favorite brand. Easy to use, accurate and durable. Some of the best specialized scopes were Textronix units with plug in modules.
excellent vid, I like how he is fast moving and packs lots into this ... the bane of my life are the 'slow moving droning taking for ever vids' .... mention no names! After all, life is too short and we've all got stuff to do. I think I'll go and get one of these.
I've just picked one of these up for free. I was at the local recycling centre (AKA Bayley Street Tip) dropping off garden waste when I saw a guy taking this out of the boot. I mentioned that you don't see them these days and he offered it to me. The man at the centre had to agree (as it's not swap shop or car boot sale). Now I have a functioning but untested or calibrated analogue 'scope. My son said I was an idiot.
A way to rejuvenate and remove the scratches in the screen overlay is to remove it, and use brasso and a cotton cloth to buff it. Buff with circular movement and avoid scratching the other side. The result is incredible.
Just came up with a tip if you want to bye a scope on ebay. Ask the seller to take a photo of the screen, displaying an arbitrary frequency like 17,700 kHz
Started out annoyed by voice, ended up loving this video and the enthusiasm for testing a scope, AND much more prepared for getting my first scope. Thanks a bunch!
@squiggyreck It's the "-3dB bandwidth". The frequency at which the input signal is displayed "-3dB down" in amplitude. e.g. a 1Vp-p signal is displayed as 0.707Vp-p
He's not joking. The earth's magnetic field and other factors can affect the trace rotation on a 'scope, that's why the adjustment is so easily accessible on the front.
I want to thank you for this video. Upon recommendation of one of your other videos, I purchased a Instek and Hitachi scope along with an Instek function generator for a very cheap price and you have helped me greatly with using the hitachi 35 mhz scope and the Isntek GOS 6112. From a beginners point of view I think I am going in the right direction. Thank you again.
My trick for checking for burnt spots on a CRT scope : 1) Hook up a function generator, triangle wave, some high frequency around 50~100 KHz 2) Max out the volt scale to match the upper and lower borders of the screen 3) Lower the time base to some slow value in order to have a lot of periods shown The screen is now entirely lit up and you look at all the surface. :)
I am interested in buying a 225 Tektronix but the guy that is selling it says that it needs calibration the lines on the screen are not solid they are broken and with a little curvature on one end is that normal?and if it needs to be calibrated is calibration expensive if I take it to a shop?Thank you for any advice you can provide.Cheers
This video was quite helpful. I bought an old analog oscilloscope on eBay for around $50 or so several months ago and never got it to do anything besides turn on and make a dot move across the screen, because I had never used an oscilloscope before. But now I got it to measure the 0.5 V calibration thingie and display a square wave after some fiddling around, so now I'm fairly certain it works ok. It is not, however, good for testing the voltage on 9v batteries. I used my multimeter at the same time as my oscilloscope after some low results, and the multimeter displayed about 1 V after the oscilloscope was added. I have a Hitachi Digital Storage Oscilloscope VC-6041, by the way. Apparently I can hook it up to a computer or something, too. But it's still analog, or at least has the cathode ray tube screen thingie.
Chances are, you're using a 10x probe :) which means that it reduces the amplitude of your signal by a factor of 10, so for example if you're on the 5 V/div setting, it's really showing 50 V/div
The Hitachi V-1050F is another good example of an analog scope with a 10x vertical mag that enables you to measure down to 500uV/div. The Hitachi does feature a dual time-base with A/B triggering and goes down to 2ns/div on the horizontal with the 10x horizontal mag enabled. It is also only a 2-channel scope but if you enable the "Trigger View" function and set the trigger sources to external, you can get 4 signals on the screen at once, although there are some limitations.
Exelente Dave thanks. I found one of those In a storage room at my old job and my boss gave it to me. I know it works but I haven´t had time to test it properly, now I know how. Nice one.
@LSDjTutorials Your formula is correct, but you forgot that the scope actually generates 20mV, not 10mV in 50ohm mode. It's only 10mV into a 50ohm load.
I got an 2215A (still got no DSO). 50MHz dual trace (2mV/50nS minimum) with second timebase. I love it! At least for a repeating signal a second timebase is almost as good as a storage osci.
Yes, I just paid AUD$270 for one from eBay, without probes, though it does have the handle/bail and a plastic cap or cover for the face, and another for the back, all in aid of making this delectable little CRO safe to chuck in the boot of a car or similar. Having done my technician's training in the eighties on a CRO of similar vintage which was then new, I finally feel I've got a 'real oscilloscope' again, something which my more recent purchases of digital scopes did not make me feel at all.
@KozmykJ Yes, the probe "calibration" is always mislabled IMO. Or, you could say, people misunderstand what it's for. You don't calibrate X and Y with it. You calibrate the rise edges of a square wave. See how the signal looked (bent rise), when Dave connected the probe to it? You would then normally turn a screw on the probe until it looks square.
@EEVblog Yes Dave you are right, the Tek 2235A only goes to 2 mVolts or 0.002 microvolts, or 2000 uVolts, 2000 microvolts. You are right. I forget my 2225 went to .5mV (500uV/Div) , my memory failed me, thinking it was 5mV, my mistake. I sold my 2225 yr ago for $150+shipping. I paid $50, but you got a good deal. Personally I need bandwidth more than Vert sensitivity. I'd really like analog over 300 Mhz BW or more. I often want accurate measurements at 120 Mhz, so 400 Mhz scope would be nice.
+Johnkinsey Summerfield The digitals are great! However they need super high sampling. A cheaper digital would not correctly show the function generator DAC steps that Dave illustrated. The old analogue scopes have ∞ sampling. I have one sitting on top of the other.
I sold my 2225 for a 2235A which is 100 Mhz scope, dual time base and goes down to 2 micro V/div ..... The 22XX series, as they get older they may need a recap in the HV switching power supply; as you say the switching pwr supply makes them light. The Tek 22XX's have an amazing trigger.....
you may get even better performance if you compensate your probe for both low and high frequency. you have to take your Tek probe apart to do the high frequency adjustment, then you need to mark that probe for the channel it will be paired with and any other probes need to be treated the same. Probe compensation is delicate because Tek uses resistive cables in their equipment of that time frame to reduce noise. I have the 2440 and have read up on their probes, mine are P6137's and a P6230 which was a lot of reading. There is a old long video from Tek on probes I recommend, it should be easy to find.
Hi. You have always recommended old analog oscilloscopes, but never really said anything about old digital oscilloscopes. Of course oscilloscopes are specialized to different task(s) and...blablabla... you know that better than me. Currently I have 'Tektronix 2440 Digital Oscilloscope'(1988). I believe it is very high quality and perfect for microcontroller analysis. What do you think about old (digital) scopes?
Find service manual before adjusting! My Tek 2225 didn't need calibration. The 2235A I have now did. One chan vert attenuation module, plug-in modules, two pots, was flaky. I was fortunate found part cheap. However I needed to re-adjust the vertical. I used the other channel to compare, close enough. As you know attenuation above 35% BW is normal & increases to rated BW. Relative measurements don't need absolute values. The manual has graph of attenuation vs Freq if you want to factor that in.
Is it common to all analog oscilloscopes that beam from CRT (when DC is applied or no signal at all) on the x-axis is not absolutely straight? I got BK model 2125C and its x-axis straight line/DC is not ideally horizontal. Could this be a sign of bad quality scope or is it normal?
Awesome review, thanks! I just picked one up for $200 US, which is probably close to $100 AU. A really nice piece of equipment for my first-ever o-scope =)
I picked up a B&K Precision 2190B analog scope a few weeks ago from a family friend for $100. 100MHz, dual-channel, 5mV/div, pretty solid specs I guess for the price, though I'm not sure about the brand. How'd I do for my first scope? I'm a computer engineering student, and I'm hoping to get some solid tinkering in over the summer.
And actually another question. Why can he see a vertical line on the square wave on 27:00? Other analog scopes I see online (never had any - yet?) don't display that line, maybe only if we go to uV per division or something. Why does his one show? Amazingly high intensity?
I bought an Tektronix 2225 for 70 € in Germany yesterday . It's completely original. There are all the same capacitors (blue, manufactured by Rubycon). I just have to clean the contacts from the Potentiometers for Volt/Div and Sec/Div. Apart from this it's completely operational. Should I replace the capacitors?
Hi tell me about that little red switch behind the 2225 Scope (ac line voltage selector) I get confused. When 230 can be visually seen on that switch it means what? Dose it mean it set on 230? Or It means that set on 110. Help me please
I love older scopes because you have all the controls at your fingertips and see the settings at a glance. I also love what digital scopes can do, BUT, BUT, I really hate the lack of controls, so it takes MUCH longer to change settings after going through 3 levels in a menu, AND with many of those settings HIDDEN! ...AAAAAAAAHHHHHHHH!
Well, I got it going all right. You'll never believe what was wrong. A brand new probe which I'd bought for it (it didn't come with probes) turned out to be open circuit. Struth! It never even occurred to me to check …
I have that exact scope I have had it for many years I got to use in a radio repair shop I worked in when I got layed off from my high paying job . It is always nice to have a back up knowledge to get a carry over job until you find a better one . The shop I went to did not have any scopes so I bought one many years ago for 100 bucks still have it today. I had a fluke o-scope meter but it got stolen I miss it but never had the money to replace it.
Hi Dave, If the probe ground is the same as the chassis ground for tek scopes, how do connect the probe leads to test a circuit? Every time I try it the wave form goes well below ground on the display. Should the tek scope chassis ground be connected to the power supply ground? Can you recommend any links that illustrates how to make the connections? Any help well be greatly appreciated.
I got one now tadaaaa :) bit Dave effect price (200 Eur) but still best for my LA2A tube compressor projects :) because of sensitivity. Thx Dave for this review from Germany! Just opened my eyes what I need to find
@tek7904 You are right 2 millivolts/DIV is the min Vert scale for the 2235A..... and Dave made the same mistake. The Tek 2225 only has 5 millivolts/DIV not 5 microvolts/Div as Dave said at 2:20 to 2:30. My mistake for listening to Dave.
what range should I be looking for as a beginner? I'm thinning 100Mhz because I'm looking at trying to build a radio telescope. but could I get away with obesity in the 50mhz or 75 mhz range?
Got a 2230 DSO myself.....the guy at the industrial surplus shop thought it was an EKG from a doctor because it was on the Tek stand. $79 including stand, all manuals, and probes. I was just looking for a decent chair but couldn't pass it up.
Hey Dave, I'm a big fan of your videos, keep up the good work. But I would like to ask you for some recommended classes and degrees that I would need/want to put myself in a career similar to yours, as a freshman in Wyoming, there is not a lot of choices for classes on this subject, but id appreciate some suggestions, Thanks.
Hello Dave, if you're listening … I've just bought one of these from eBay, which was advertised as fully functioning, and it's not working. There's a trace, but it doesn't register vertical input on either channel. Vertical output amp maybe? I've let the seller know, but as this CRO is from the 80s and the seller is a music shop, I doubt very much that they'll be able to repair it if I send it back. I've got the service manual, and I'm an ex TV tech in Bundaberg QLD. Reckon I could fix it?
Hello. Thank you for such a detailed review of this device, I wanted to ask if it is worth buying such a device in 2024. I want to take it for the repair and manufacture of pulse converters. Or it's already worth looking towards digital devices. Sincerely, Alexander
Ch 1 most likely has more noise than ch 2 due to sheer proximity to the CRO. Probably picking up that lovely emf off the vertical deflection grids. If the noise looks the same on more than one timebase, as in no change in shape, is most likely is being a good little antenna. ;-)
Two things.... FUZZ you have a focus control.... did you try that? Second it is a 50 Mhz bandwidth scope and is only going to be guaranteed to perform accurately up to specs to about 1/3rd BW, or in other words over about 17 Mhz you start to get attenuation. This is common. If you need an accurate measurement to 50 Mhz you need a 150 Mhz BW scope.
Hey Dave, I'm about to buy my first analog oscilloscope, but I'm not quite sure what all the switches and knobs are for. This video has already taught me a lot, but I was wondering if you maybe had an oscilloscope tutorial on your channel. - Nick
I got the 60 Mhz version. I bought it brand new in 1985. It cost as I remember $1,200 US. I still use it today. Before I got it I had a couple of junkie scope with vacuum tubes. I spent more time trying to get the scope working then I did experimenting on a circuit. So I worked all summer at minimum wage to save up for my first brand new solid state Tektronix 2213A. I'm sure my parents thought I was crazy. Today's oscilloscope without a CRT seems lifeless. After all these years I still love my Tektronix 2213A. It seems heard to believe you can get a scope like this for around 100 bucks.
Yes ! I love DSOs but they are boring. CROs are always a pleasure !
@@shyleshsrinivasan5092 I really love the features and such of my Siglent SDS1204X-E but it doesnt see a whole lot of use because I just love my Tektronix analog scopes. My 2252 sees daily use and my 2235 and Protek P3502C see almost daily use as backup scopes.
❤
"Today's oscilloscope without a CRT seems lifeless"
That's just...your opinion.
I am just starting out on my new hobby at 58 and I bought one of these from ebay, your tutorial has really taken the uncertainty away, great job, thanks from the UK.
Thank you! I was just given this scope by a fellow ham operator and I am so excited as I have always wanted one for my lab. Your videos on the 2225 are a fantastic resource for me!
I just got an old hitachi scope on ebay for $12 and it's very old but works well. I took Dave's advice and it's been a good learning experience for me.
got my first lab piece 2225 for $55.00, spent all day fixing it. so happy but need to buy probes and stuff to calibrate it. My board is brighter green and the display as well. Thanks Dave so much
I used to have a job calibrating scopes. Textronix was my favorite brand. Easy to use, accurate and durable. Some of the best specialized scopes were Textronix units with plug in modules.
I recently got a Tektronix 2235 for free w/ cart and this video has helped me tremendously, Thank you!
excellent vid, I like how he is fast moving and packs lots into this ... the bane of my life are the 'slow moving droning taking for ever vids' .... mention no names! After all, life is too short and we've all got stuff to do. I think I'll go and get one of these.
Now the used value of Tek 2225s will increase thanks to this video :)
Sweet 'scope, Dave. And, your enthusiastic discussion makes us appreciate that fact!
I've just picked one of these up for free. I was at the local recycling centre (AKA Bayley Street Tip) dropping off garden waste when I saw a guy taking this out of the boot. I mentioned that you don't see them these days and he offered it to me. The man at the centre had to agree (as it's not swap shop or car boot sale).
Now I have a functioning but untested or calibrated analogue 'scope.
My son said I was an idiot.
Your Teardown and Calibration of the 2225 Tek ROCKS!! Thanks!!!
Thumbs up if you're playing along at home on your own CRO!
A way to rejuvenate and remove the scratches in the screen overlay is to remove it, and use brasso and a cotton cloth to buff it. Buff with circular movement and avoid scratching the other side. The result is incredible.
Just came up with a tip if you want to bye a scope on ebay.
Ask the seller to take a photo of the screen, displaying an arbitrary frequency like 17,700 kHz
Thanks for this - it was very handy in getting my own 2225 up and running.
Started out annoyed by voice, ended up loving this video and the enthusiasm for testing a scope, AND much more prepared for getting my first scope. Thanks a bunch!
@squiggyreck It's the "-3dB bandwidth". The frequency at which the input signal is displayed "-3dB down" in amplitude. e.g. a 1Vp-p signal is displayed as 0.707Vp-p
He's not joking. The earth's magnetic field and other factors can affect the trace rotation on a 'scope, that's why the adjustment is so easily accessible on the front.
Yeah, I was cringing when Dave tap and scarped the screwdriver across the screen! Ugh!
uggh....get over it ...
it is just old piece of waste electronics. a 200 USD digital Oscilloscope is way better than this
Settle down mate it's an old Tektronix it'll survive.
@@alexiscuddeback5592 Same (I've got a 2465A), although once you get up in to the $800 range digital scopes start getting useful.
@G E T R E K T 905 AS iS pRoVen BY YOUr EMPtY ChAnNEl. lol I'm sure your parents are quite proud of your shitty wannabe photonicinduction videos.
I want to thank you for this video. Upon recommendation of one of your other videos, I purchased a Instek and Hitachi scope along with an Instek function generator for a very cheap price and you have helped me greatly with using the hitachi 35 mhz scope and the Isntek GOS 6112. From a beginners point of view I think I am going in the right direction. Thank you again.
@lebeyes No, the CAL control only reduces the current V/DIV setting, it doesn't increase it, which is what is needed here.
My trick for checking for burnt spots on a CRT scope :
1) Hook up a function generator, triangle wave, some high frequency around 50~100 KHz
2) Max out the volt scale to match the upper and lower borders of the screen
3) Lower the time base to some slow value in order to have a lot of periods shown
The screen is now entirely lit up and you look at all the surface. :)
I am interested in buying a 225 Tektronix but the guy that is selling it says that it needs calibration the lines on the screen are not solid they are broken and with a little curvature on one end is that normal?and if it needs to be calibrated is calibration expensive if I take it to a shop?Thank you for any advice you can provide.Cheers
I am know to oscilloscopes so by the lines I meant the trace'sThank you
Sorry I should have said 2225 not 225
Great review, very well presented as usual, easy to view, top job. FYI : Just bought a 2225 myself.
This video was quite helpful. I bought an old analog oscilloscope on eBay for around $50 or so several months ago and never got it to do anything besides turn on and make a dot move across the screen, because I had never used an oscilloscope before. But now I got it to measure the 0.5 V calibration thingie and display a square wave after some fiddling around, so now I'm fairly certain it works ok. It is not, however, good for testing the voltage on 9v batteries. I used my multimeter at the same time as my oscilloscope after some low results, and the multimeter displayed about 1 V after the oscilloscope was added.
I have a Hitachi Digital Storage Oscilloscope VC-6041, by the way. Apparently I can hook it up to a computer or something, too. But it's still analog, or at least has the cathode ray tube screen thingie.
Chances are, you're using a 10x probe :) which means that it reduces the amplitude of your signal by a factor of 10, so for example if you're on the 5 V/div setting, it's really showing 50 V/div
Can't wait to see the teardown!
That is a very nice scope! Looks practically new!
Did Dave video the calibration process ? I have the same model and would like to calibrate it..
The Hitachi V-1050F is another good example of an analog scope with a 10x vertical mag that enables you to measure down to 500uV/div. The Hitachi does feature a dual time-base with A/B triggering and goes down to 2ns/div on the horizontal with the 10x horizontal mag enabled. It is also only a 2-channel scope but if you enable the "Trigger View" function and set the trigger sources to external, you can get 4 signals on the screen at once, although there are some limitations.
+defaultuser000 Yep. That's my analogue scope as well. Bit of a learning curve but a nice bit of kit.
Just received a 2235A, love this thing! I'll be using your video for references, so far all seems to work great :)
Nice scope overview. I have a 2213 and and I learned much from this discussion. Look forward to the calibration vid. Thanks Dave.
Exelente Dave thanks. I found one of those In a storage room at my old job and my boss gave it to me. I know it works but I haven´t had time to test it properly, now I know how. Nice one.
@KozmykJ Yeah, probe cal signal are usually very roughly 1KHz!
@LSDjTutorials Your formula is correct, but you forgot that the scope actually generates 20mV, not 10mV in 50ohm mode. It's only 10mV into a 50ohm load.
Awesome Video Dave!! Picked my Tek2225 for $80,00 on E/Bay. Found a used service manual for $15,,,,, Very Happy With Performance
Your Videos are Interesting and Informative,,,,,,,Thanks Dave!!!!
@gmcjetpilot The Tek 2235A only goes down to 2mV/DIV, not 2uV/DIV.
Absolutely love my TEK 2445A
Congrats ! Thats a great piece of Tek !
@cyprox Yes, the Agilent 3000X can generate it. No reason.
Dave I just bought a Tektronix 2245 100 MHz 4-channel scope for $180.00 USD. Can't wait to check it out, per your criteria, thanks!
Mine us still going. Dug it out yesterday, cleaned the 1/2" of dust off it. Fired up and still going...👍👍👍👍
I got an 2215A (still got no DSO). 50MHz dual trace (2mV/50nS minimum) with second timebase. I love it! At least for a repeating signal a second timebase is almost as good as a storage osci.
Yes, I just paid AUD$270 for one from eBay, without probes, though it does have the handle/bail and a plastic cap or cover for the face, and another for the back, all in aid of making this delectable little CRO safe to chuck in the boot of a car or similar.
Having done my technician's training in the eighties on a CRO of similar vintage which was then new, I finally feel I've got a 'real oscilloscope' again, something which my more recent purchases of digital scopes did not make me feel at all.
@KozmykJ
Yes, the probe "calibration" is always mislabled IMO. Or, you could say, people misunderstand what it's for. You don't calibrate X and Y with it. You calibrate the rise edges of a square wave. See how the signal looked (bent rise), when Dave connected the probe to it? You would then normally turn a screw on the probe until it looks square.
tuve la oportunidad de trabajar con osciloscopio tektronix con memoria enhanment durante cuatro años sin fallas muy buena tecnologia
@EEVblog
Yes Dave you are right, the Tek 2235A only goes to 2 mVolts or 0.002 microvolts, or 2000 uVolts, 2000 microvolts. You are right. I forget my 2225 went to .5mV (500uV/Div) , my memory failed me, thinking it was 5mV, my mistake. I sold my 2225 yr ago for $150+shipping. I paid $50, but you got a good deal.
Personally I need bandwidth more than Vert sensitivity. I'd really like analog over 300 Mhz BW or more. I often want accurate measurements at 120 Mhz, so 400 Mhz scope would be nice.
@xng14 @xng14 Indeed, can't wait to see the teardown + calibration video Dave!
I've been wondering all this time, what the hell are 'Joule channel' oscilloscopes. Now I get it! :) (English is not my first language)
+Tome4kkkk should read DUEL OSCILLOSCOPE or two traces i have a digital scope it is more interesting
+Johnkinsey Summerfield The digitals are great! However they need super high sampling. A cheaper digital would not correctly show the function generator DAC steps that Dave illustrated.
The old analogue scopes have ∞ sampling.
I have one sitting on top of the other.
+Johnkinsey Summerfield I'm picturing the traces in combat! I believe you meant DUAL ;)
SimoWill75
Tracer rounds!!
:-)
US English speaker here, I thought the same for a couple of videos. Dave should do a video on Australian slang lol
I sold my 2225 for a 2235A which is 100 Mhz scope, dual time base and goes down to 2 micro V/div ..... The 22XX series, as they get older they may need a recap in the HV switching power supply; as you say the switching pwr supply makes them light. The Tek 22XX's have an amazing trigger.....
I always I've pefered an analogic scope vs digital. Recently, I got one Tektronix 2247A scope and I loved it.
@lebeyes Yeah, that was common hobby magazine project back in the 70's
I'm looking forward to this tear down :)
I'm hoping to buy a 2230 this weekend! I'm so excited. All I have now is a cheap USB scope I found on clearance at Micro Center.
Glad I found this video, was just about to put in a cheeky bid on one!
you may get even better performance if you compensate your probe for both low and high frequency. you have to take your Tek probe apart to do the high frequency adjustment, then you need to mark that probe for the channel it will be paired with and any other probes need to be treated the same. Probe compensation is delicate because Tek uses resistive cables in their equipment of that time frame to reduce noise. I have the 2440 and have read up on their probes, mine are P6137's and a P6230 which was a lot of reading. There is a old long video from Tek on probes I recommend, it should be easy to find.
Hi.
You have always recommended old analog oscilloscopes, but never really said anything about old digital oscilloscopes. Of course oscilloscopes are specialized to different task(s) and...blablabla... you know that better than me.
Currently I have 'Tektronix 2440 Digital Oscilloscope'(1988). I believe it is very high quality and perfect for microcontroller analysis.
What do you think about old (digital) scopes?
Find service manual before adjusting! My Tek 2225 didn't need calibration. The 2235A I have now did. One chan vert attenuation module, plug-in modules, two pots, was flaky. I was fortunate found part cheap. However I needed to re-adjust the vertical. I used the other channel to compare, close enough. As you know attenuation above 35% BW is normal & increases to rated BW. Relative measurements don't need absolute values. The manual has graph of attenuation vs Freq if you want to factor that in.
Is it common to all analog oscilloscopes that beam from CRT (when DC is applied or no signal at all) on the x-axis is not absolutely straight? I got BK model 2125C and its x-axis straight line/DC is not ideally horizontal. Could this be a sign of bad quality scope or is it normal?
You just need to adjust the trace rotation trimpot.
It's normal, so most oscilloscope have it directly accessible from the front panel.
Awesome review, thanks! I just picked one up for $200 US, which is probably close to $100 AU. A really nice piece of equipment for my first-ever o-scope =)
Hi. Which are other two scopes that can measure 500mkA? Hameg 1005 is one of them?
@gmcjetpilot I said 500uV/DIV.
I picked up a B&K Precision 2190B analog scope a few weeks ago from a family friend for $100. 100MHz, dual-channel, 5mV/div, pretty solid specs I guess for the price, though I'm not sure about the brand. How'd I do for my first scope? I'm a computer engineering student, and I'm hoping to get some solid tinkering in over the summer.
Make sure you have the service manual, other than that B&K is a good brand for what I've read.
Can you tell me about the BNC cables you are using? They look very well made and I would like to buy some.
And actually another question. Why can he see a vertical line on the square wave on 27:00? Other analog scopes I see online (never had any - yet?) don't display that line, maybe only if we go to uV per division or something. Why does his one show? Amazingly high intensity?
@xXdenhartXx I thought I mentioned that in the video? $100
I bought an Tektronix 2225 for 70 € in Germany yesterday . It's completely original. There are all the same capacitors (blue, manufactured by Rubycon). I just have to clean the contacts from the Potentiometers for Volt/Div and Sec/Div. Apart from this it's completely operational.
Should I replace the capacitors?
Any cheap scope for beginners or enthusiasts? Even if handheld?
thank you
Hi
tell me about that little red switch behind the 2225
Scope (ac line voltage selector)
I get confused.
When 230 can be visually seen on that switch it means what?
Dose it mean it set on 230?
Or
It means that set on 110.
Help me please
I love older scopes because you have all the controls at your fingertips and see the settings at a glance. I also love what digital scopes can do, BUT, BUT, I really hate the lack of controls, so it takes MUCH longer to change settings after going through 3 levels in a menu, AND with many of those settings HIDDEN! ...AAAAAAAAHHHHHHHH!
Agree ! I just LOVE them.
Well, I got it going all right. You'll never believe what was wrong. A brand new probe which I'd bought for it (it didn't come with probes) turned out to be open circuit. Struth! It never even occurred to me to check …
Are most oscilloscopes dual voltage? Just wondering if I order one from the states if it will work here in Germany.
Hi Dave.
I like your blog a lot.
Is there any chance to buy such a scope from you?
Thank's!
Just picked one up for $21.50 on eBay, $50 shipping and it's in good condition, pretty stoked. I think I already have a gear collecting problem lol
I have that exact scope I have had it for many years I got to use in a radio repair shop I worked in when I got layed off from my high paying job . It is always nice to have a back up knowledge to get a carry over job until you find a better one . The shop I went to did not have any scopes so I bought one many years ago for 100 bucks still have it today. I had a fluke o-scope meter but it got stolen I miss it but never had the money to replace it.
Hi Dave, If the probe ground is the same as the chassis ground for tek scopes, how do connect the probe leads to test a circuit? Every time I try it the wave form goes well below ground on the display. Should the tek scope chassis ground be connected to the power supply ground? Can you recommend any links that illustrates how to make the connections? Any help well be greatly appreciated.
I got one now tadaaaa :) bit Dave effect price (200 Eur) but still best for my LA2A tube compressor projects :) because of sensitivity. Thx Dave for this review from Germany! Just opened my eyes what I need to find
@tek7904
You are right 2 millivolts/DIV is the min Vert scale for the 2235A..... and Dave made the same mistake.
The Tek 2225 only has 5 millivolts/DIV not 5 microvolts/Div as Dave said at 2:20 to 2:30. My mistake for listening to Dave.
@hitachi088 0.5mV or 0.0005V
So what happens if you have a broken trace on the screen? does that mean the scope is no good?
@flytepark The Wide Screen version is better.
Hey i have a type r647a scope Tektronix. I cant find info on it anywhere. Is it worthy
what range should I be looking for as a beginner? I'm thinning 100Mhz because I'm looking at trying to build a radio telescope. but could I get away with obesity in the 50mhz or 75 mhz range?
pardons for the spelling. .
+Josh M auto correct got me... obesity should be *could i
+Josh M no
Hi dave, nice video as always!
Can you show us the calibration process in the teardown video please.
nice scope btw
Only 500uV/div? I have my good old tek 547 with 1A6 and 10uV/div. Or how about my 564 with 3A3 and two channel 100uV/div?
Tektronix 2215 Analog Oscilloscope came to day time to study thank you for this video! plus I paid $70 for it on ebay did I do good?
A working one of these on eBay, even in beat up shape is $200 plus shipping. A refurb is like $500.
Got a 2230 DSO myself.....the guy at the industrial surplus shop thought it was an EKG from a doctor because it was on the Tek stand. $79 including stand, all manuals, and probes. I was just looking for a decent chair but couldn't pass it up.
Hey Dave, I'm a big fan of your videos, keep up the good work. But I would like to ask you for some recommended classes and degrees that I would need/want to put myself in a career similar to yours, as a freshman in Wyoming, there is not a lot of choices for classes on this subject, but id appreciate some suggestions, Thanks.
Hello Dave, if you're listening …
I've just bought one of these from eBay, which was advertised as fully functioning, and it's not working. There's a trace, but it doesn't register vertical input on either channel. Vertical output amp maybe?
I've let the seller know, but as this CRO is from the 80s and the seller is a music shop, I doubt very much that they'll be able to repair it if I send it back. I've got the service manual, and I'm an ex TV tech in Bundaberg QLD. Reckon I could fix it?
Dave just wondering if you could gimme a line on getting the schematics for the Tektronix 2225 scope you featured and calibrated in EEV blog #196?
Hello. Thank you for such a detailed review of this device, I wanted to ask if it is worth buying such a device in 2024. I want to take it for the repair and manufacture of pulse converters. Or it's already worth looking towards digital devices. Sincerely, Alexander
I remember seeing schematics of chopper circuits you could build to have 2 channels on a one channel scope.
Ch 1 most likely has more noise than ch 2 due to sheer proximity to the CRO. Probably picking up that lovely emf off the vertical deflection grids. If the noise looks the same on more than one timebase, as in no change in shape, is most likely is being a good little antenna. ;-)
I would love to see you calibrate your scope mabe in the tear down vid? Thanks for showing. Steve
What good is SGL SWP trigger mode? I am unfamiliar with that mode on a scope, seems like a pointless feature.
Single Sweep - triggers when you push the button.
+William Phinizy Thank You!
Two things.... FUZZ you have a focus control.... did you try that?
Second it is a 50 Mhz bandwidth scope and is only going to be guaranteed to perform accurately up to specs to about 1/3rd BW, or in other words over about 17 Mhz you start to get attenuation. This is common. If you need an accurate measurement to 50 Mhz you need a 150 Mhz BW scope.
excelente tutorial gracias
Hey Dave, I'm about to buy my first analog oscilloscope, but I'm not quite sure what all the switches and knobs are for. This video has already taught me a lot, but I was wondering if you maybe had an oscilloscope tutorial on your channel.
- Nick