567

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The Tektronix 567 is a sampling scope made by Tektronix in the mid 1960's, first sold in 1963. It has a digital plug-in unit, the 6R1 or 6R1A, that can be used to measure waveform characteristics such as rise time. This digital unit provides a go/no-go output based on waveform characteristics. This feature make the 567 particularly useful in production testing, for example, binning logic gates based on their speed. The 567 came after the 661 and before the 568.

The 567 has three plug-in compartments. The left compartment holds a 3S-series sampling vertical unit. The center compartment holds a 3T-series sampling sweep unit. The right compartment holds the digital unit. It is possible to operate a 567 without the digital unit but in that configuration it provides the same functionality that a 561 provides.

The 6R1 and 6R1A digital units have several different operating modes. These modes can be classified in to time measurement or voltage measurement. One time measurement mode, for example, shows the time delay between the rising pulse edge on input A and the falling pulse edge on input B. This is useful for measuring the speed of a logic gate such as an inverter. One of the voltage measurement modes displays the difference between the input A voltage at on time and the input A voltage at some other time. This is useful for measuring the peak-to-peak amplitude of a signal.

The mechanisms used by the digital unit are a sample and hold circuit, a comparator, a counter, and a switched tap voltage divider. The digital unit takes its input from the vertical signal produced by the sampling unit. Therefore, it operates on a low-speed signal, somewhat similar to the intermediate frequency (IF) in a superheterodyne radio. The user of the 567 positions two cursors along the X-axis. These cursors define two times and two voltages. The tapped voltage divider produces several voltages along the interval spanned by the two cursor voltages: 10%, 20%, 27%, 50%, 73%, 80%, and 90%. These voltages are used for making measurements such as the 10%-to-90% rise time. In this case, a counter is reset and started when the signal passes through the 10% voltage. The counter counts the number of cycles of a built-in crystal clock. When the signal reaches the 90% voltage, the counter is stopped and the count is displayed on the nixie tube digital numeric readout. The units and decimal place of the digital unit are controlled switch contacts on the timing unit plug-in, which connect to the digital unit through a multipin connector in the 567.