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 [[155-0078-00|custom integrated circuits]] for most of the gain blocks.   
Triggering uses [[tunnel diodes]].
Triggering uses [[tunnel diodes]].



Revision as of 22:02, 5 April 2020

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

Produced from 1972 to 1986

Manuals
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).

The 485 uses the 154-0652-00 and 154-0652-05 CRTs.

Key Specifications

Input Impedance 50 Ω / 1 MΩ // 20 pF
Rise time 1 ns (50 Ω) / 1.4 ns (1 MΩ)
Bandwidth 350 MHz (50 Ω) / 250 MHz (1 MΩ)
Deflection 5 mV/div to 5 V/div in 1−2−5 sequence, 2% accuracy
Time Base 1 ns/div to 0.5 s/div in 1−2−5 sequence

Links

Maintenance issues

A healthy Tek 485 CRT has been observed to have a filament current of 98 mA. A broken Tek 485 CRT that lost its vacuum was observed to have a filament current of 153 mA.

Pictures