454

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The Tektronix 454 can be seen as an improved 453. The bandwidth is 150 MHz, compared to 50 MHz for a 453.

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150 MHz portable dual-trace scope
Tektronix 454 front

Produced from 1967 to 1974

Manuals
(All manuals in PDF format unless noted otherwise)

The 454 uses a CRT with distributed vertical deflection plates. Without distributed deflection plates, a CRT designer is forced to trade off deflection sensitivity for deflection speed.

A CRT with low sensitivity requires a vertical amplifier with a large output swing. It is difficult to find transistors that have both large voltage swing and high speed.

Most transistors with high ft values also have quite low collector breakdown voltages. So the most practical solution was to use distributed deflection plates, and that is what Tektronix did.

The 454 weighs 29 pounds and consumes about 130 watts.

The 454 has a 140 ns delay line in the signal path after the input channel switching and before the main vertical amplifier. There is a phase equalizer after the delay line to mitigate the harm done to pulse fidelity by the delay line.

The 454 is the fastest general-purpose Tektronix scope that does not use proprietary hybrid circuits or proprietary integrated circuits.

With the input sensitivity set to 10mV/div and above, the 454A has a vertical bandwidth of 150 MHz. At 5 mV/div it is 100 MHz, and at 2 mV/div it is 50 MHz. It is possible to cascade the channel-1 and channel-2 input amplifiers to obtain a sensitivity of 400 μV/div. In that configuration, the vertical bandwidth is 33 MHz.

The 454 was introduced in March 1967. The 454A was introduced in 1971.

Specifications

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Pictures