3B1: Difference between revisions

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Image:3b1 top.jpg|Top
Image:3b1 top.jpg|Top
Image:3b1 cat3.jpg|In 1965 Catalog
Image:3b1 cat3.jpg|In 1965 Catalog
File:3b1 normal trigger.png|Normal trigger circuit
File:3b1 delay pickoff.png|Delay pickoff circuit
File:3b1 delay pickoff.png|Delay pickoff circuit
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Revision as of 19:50, 19 May 2012

The Tektronix 3B1 is a timebase plug-in introduced in 1962 for 560-series scopes. 10MHz is is the maximum trigger frequency. The calibrated sweep rates go from 1 sec/div to 500 nsec/div. There is a switch that enables 5X horizontal magnification, which makes the fastest sweep 100 nsec/div. The 3B1 has a delayed sweep and a regular sweep. The 3B1 uses vacuum tubes, bipolar junction transistors, and tunnel diodes.

The trigger input goes through the int/ext switch and then the ac/dc coupling switch, and then a 7895 cathode follower. The output of the cathode follower drives one base of a 2N2207 PNP differential amplifier which has a tunnel diode in the collector load. The tunnel diode generates pulses when it switches back and forth between its two stable voltages, which are capacitively coupled to a 2N2501 NPN common emitter amplifier.

The delayed trigger circuit is a 6DJ8 differential amplifier that compares the sweep ramp voltage with a knob-controlled DC voltage which determines the point where the delayed trigger starts. The DC voltage is made by a ZZ1000 80V reference passed through a potentiometer-variable voltage divider. When the sweep ramp exceeds the control voltage, a tunnel diode in the plate load of the differential amplifier switches state.