502: Difference between revisions
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depending on the mode whether differential inputs are used. | depending on the mode whether differential inputs are used. | ||
At 200uV/cm the bandwidth is only 100kHz but at 200mV/cm it rises to 1MHz. | At 200uV/cm the bandwidth is only 100kHz but at 200mV/cm it rises to 1MHz. | ||
There is a 502, a 502A, and an RM502A. There is a transistor-regulated heater supply build in. | There is a 502, a 502A, and an RM502A. | ||
There is a transistor-regulated heater supply build in. | |||
There is no post-deflection acceleration. | |||
The CRT cathode voltage is -2900V. | |||
Price at July 1959 was $825. | Price at July 1959 was $825. | ||
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Image:Tek_502_front.jpg|502 front view | Image:Tek_502_front.jpg|502 front view | ||
Image:Tek 502a block.png|502A block diagram | Image:Tek 502a block.png|502A block diagram | ||
Image:Tek-502a vert.png|502A vertical amplifier | |||
Image:Tek rm 502a front.jpg|RM 502A | Image:Tek rm 502a front.jpg|RM 502A | ||
Image:Rm 502a display.jpg|RM 502A display | Image:Rm 502a display.jpg|RM 502A display |
Revision as of 12:17, 26 December 2011
The 502 is a dual-beam oscilloscope introduced in 1958 with a high sensitivity of 100 or 200 microvolts/cm, depending on the mode whether differential inputs are used. At 200uV/cm the bandwidth is only 100kHz but at 200mV/cm it rises to 1MHz. There is a 502, a 502A, and an RM502A. There is a transistor-regulated heater supply build in. There is no post-deflection acceleration. The CRT cathode voltage is -2900V.
Price at July 1959 was $825.
Mod 104 on a 502 provides single sweep lockout.
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502 front view
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502A block diagram
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502A vertical amplifier
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RM 502A
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RM 502A display
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RM 502A bottom
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RM 502A transformer wiring
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RM 502A top
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RM 502A vibration-isolated vertical amp