485: Difference between revisions

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The 485 was [[introduced in 1972|introduced in March of 1972]].  It includes a switching  
The 485 was [[introduced in 1972|introduced in March of 1972]].  It includes a switching  
power supply and uses custom integrated circuits for most of the gain blocks.   
power supply and uses custom integrated circuits for most of the gain blocks.   
Triggering is inplemented with [[tunnel diodes]].
Triggering uses [[tunnel diodes]].


A distinguishing feature – at least in a portable oscilloscope of its period – is the Alternate Horizontal Mode.
A distinguishing feature – at least in a portable oscilloscope of its period – is the Alternate Horizontal Mode.

Revision as of 08:32, 1 January 2015

{{{manufacturer}}} 
350 MHz portable scope
Tektronix 485

Produced from 1972 to 1986

Manuals
(All manuals in PDF format unless noted otherwise)
Manuals – Specifications – Links – Pictures

The Tektronix 485 is a dual-trace, portable analog oscilloscope with a maximum bandwidth of 350 MHz. The impedance of the inputs can be set individually to 50 Ω or 1 MΩ. The scope achieves its maximum bandwidth when the inputs are in 50 Ω mode.

The 485 was introduced in March of 1972. It includes a switching power supply and uses custom integrated circuits for most of the gain blocks. Triggering uses tunnel diodes.

A distinguishing feature – at least in a portable oscilloscope of its period – is the Alternate Horizontal Mode. In this mode, the B timebase is shown in a separate full-width scan, as opposed to the more common Mixed Mode, where the B timebase is shown on the same line as the A timebase, after the delay time. At the same time, the section shown with the B timebase is shown highlighted in the A scan.

The 465, which was introduced after the 485, only received this feature in its "B" incarnation (465B).

Specifications

please add

Pictures