2467

From TekWiki
Revision as of 05:14, 10 April 2022 by Peter (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Tektronix 2467
Portable 350/400 MHz 4-ch micro-channel scope
Tektronix 2467

Produced from 1986 to (?)

Manuals
Manuals – Specifications – Links – Pictures

The 2467 and 2467B are the same as the 2465A, except that the 2465A uses a conventional CRT while the 2467 and 2467B use a micro-channel plate CRT that enables bright traces at fast sweep rates, particularly with one-shot or low repetition rate signals.

The 2467 is from the penultimate generation of analog Tektronix scopes.

The horizontal amplifier was designed by Art Metz and Ken Schlotzhauer. Art Metz also worked on the triggers. Art Metz and Walt Ainsworth designed the sweeps.

Options

  • Option 01 (DMM) added a 4½-digit, fully autoranging digital multimeter which measures DC and AC voltage and current, resistance, dBV, dBm, continuity, and temperature.
  • Option 05 (TV) added TV (back-porch) clamp circuitry to the Channel 2 input and TV trigger coupling modes, allowing selection of either horizontal or vertical sync pulses to obtain horizontal-line-sync or field-sync pulse triggering.
  • Option 06 (Counter/Timer/Trigger) allows precision time-interval measurement, event and frequency counting, delay-by-events triggering, and logic triggering.
  • Option 09 added option 06, the CTT, plus a 17-bit P6407 word recognizer probe.
  • Option 10 added a GPIB interface for remote control.
  • Option 11 added two probe-power connectors on the rear panel of the instrument. Only shown in the 1987 catalogue.

Key Specifications

Bandwidth 350 MHz (2467B: 400 MHz)
Sweep Rate 500 ps/div
Channels Four independent channels
Vertical 2 mV/div vertical sensitivity
Cursors Delta Volts and Delta Time Cursors
CRT Readout Scale Factors, Trigger Level, Voltage, Time, Frequency, Phase and Ratio Measurements and Mode Indicators
Trigger 500 MHz min.; Advanced Triggering with "Hands Off" Auto Level Triggering
Input Impedance 50 Ω/1 MΩ inputs with 50 Ω protection
Probes Two or four P6136 ×10 probes, 1.3 m

See also

Links

Pictures