7250: Difference between revisions

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Due to the absence of vertical amplifiers in the signal path, the 7250 can handle
Due to the absence of vertical amplifiers in the signal path, the 7250 can handle
2kV spikes without damage.   
2kV spikes without damage.   
The input is through a 50-ohm N [[connectors|connector]] on the rear panel, which loops through,
The input is through a 50-ohm [[Connectors#N|N connector]] on the rear panel, which loops through,
rather than being terminated internally.  The captured waveform can be transferred
rather than being terminated internally.  The captured waveform can be transferred
to a computer via IEEE-488 or can be viewed on the built-in monitor, which is a  
to a computer via IEEE-488 or can be viewed on the built-in monitor, which is a  

Revision as of 23:18, 16 March 2012

The Tektronix 7250 is an digitizing oscilloscope with a 6GHz bandwidth. It uses a scan converter CRT for digitizing. From the scan converter, the trace is transferred to memory boards conventional RAM. The vertical resolution is 11 bits. The digitizer captures 512 samples in one shot. The fastest sweep is 50ps/division, approximately 1 terasample per second. The sensitivity is 500mV/division. Due to the absence of vertical amplifiers in the signal path, the 7250 can handle 2kV spikes without damage. The input is through a 50-ohm N connector on the rear panel, which loops through, rather than being terminated internally. The captured waveform can be transferred to a computer via IEEE-488 or can be viewed on the built-in monitor, which is a conventional computer-style CRT display and has menus. At 132 pounds, it is the heaviest one-piece oscilloscope ever sold by Tektronix. It was made by Intertechnique in France where it was sold as the IN7000, and rebranded by Tektronix for sale in the United States.

Frequency response of a 7250 has been measured as -3db@7GHz, -6dB@9.6GHz, and -8.5dB@14GHz. (Haas, Warman, van Ewijk, Rev. Sci. Instrum. 60 (3), March 1989)

The 7250 has two 3.6V 1/2AA lithium batteries on each memory board. With time, these batteries die, which will cause the 7250 to fail its power-on self test. New replacements are still (2011) widely available.