7A13

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The Tektronix 7A13 is a "differential comparator" vertical plug-in for 7000-series scopes, i.e. a fast differential amplifier with adjustable DC offset. It is one of the first 7000 series plugins, released along with the first scopes in 1969/1970, and was made until the 7000 series was retired in 1992.

Operation

Older versions display the comparison (offset) voltage through a mechanical dial, newer versions (from 1976 on) through an LED panel meter. In addition, this voltage is brought out through a front panel connector so it can be measured externally.

In differential mode, a +/-10 V common mode signal can be present at the inputs without attenuation. Either input can be switched to the comparison voltage, which is settable to four digits by a 10-step switch and a 10-turn potentiometer. In this comparator mode, the offset range is effectively 10,000 divisions.

On the 1 mV/Div to 50 mV/Div ranges, the gate resistors can be disabled by an internal switch, raising DC input impedance to "approximately infinite" (as indicated by a front panel lamp).

Key Specifications

Bandwidth 100 MHz (in 7700 or faster mainframes)
Rise time 3.5 ns
Deflection factor 1 mV/Div – 5 V/Div (1–2–5 sequence)
Common Mode range at least +10 V / -10 V from 1 mV/Div to 50 mV/Div
Overdrive Recovery to within 2 mV in 1µs (at 1 mV/Div)
CMRR at least 10,000:1 for 10 Vp-p or less, 100 kHz to 1 MHz, decreasing to 500:1 at 10 MHz with 1 Vp-p, 200:1 at 20 MHz with 1 Vp-p
Input impedance 1 MΩ // 20 pF
Comparison voltage 0 V — +/-10 V
Warmup time 5 minutes for short-term measurements, 1 hour for best stability

Internals

In the older version, the comparison voltage is generated from a precision zener supplied from either positive or negative 50 V rail, followed by a 10-step switched divider made of 0.1% resistors to select the first digit. For the lower three digits, a ten-turn potentiometer with a mechanical digital readout is used.

In the newer version, the zener-derived reference voltage is always positive. A 10-turn pot for coarse selection combines with a single-turn pot for fine control. The resultant voltage is displayed on a 4-digit DVM built around a Fairchild 3814 DVM controller.

Repair issues

The 7A13 uses twelve miniature relays similar to those used in the 7A11. These are very rare. The 7A11 repair report at amplifier.cd describes a possible replacement with a modern component.

Links

Pictures

Older version (1970-1975, mechanical meter)

Newer version (1976-1992, LED meter)