661

Revision as of 08:02, 24 August 2012 by Kurt (talk | contribs)

The Tektronix 661 is a sampling oscilloscope that was made by Tektronix starting in 1961. It accepts two plug-ins: a sampling unit and a timing unit. Four sampling units were made: the 4S1 (0.35 ns rise time), the 4S2 and 4S2A (0.1 ns rise time), and the 4S3. Three timing units were made: the 5T1, 5T1A, and the 5T3. The timing units use tunnel diode triggering. Two 50-ohm coaxial cables in the scope connect the sampling unit to the timing unit. One of these cables sends the trigger pickoff signal (if available) from the sampling unit to the timing unit. The other cable sends the timing signal from the timing unit to the sampling unit, telling it when to sample.

Other than the two plug-ins, the 661 mainframe essentially consists of four subsystems:

  • power supply
  • indicator
  • amplitude/time calibration signal generator
  • delayed pulse generator

The power supply is typical of Tektronix scopes of early 1960s. An OG3 tube is used as a voltage reference for the +300V supply. The other supply voltages use the +300V supply as their reference. The +19V and -19V supplies use BJT-based regulators. The other regulators are tube-based.

The indicator is a conventional X-Y indicator. The total CRT accelerating voltage is 3kV and the vertical and horizontal amplifiers are relatively mild differential amplifiers made of 6DJ8 tubes. The vertical amplifier has a feedback loop around it that determines the gain.

The amplitude/time calibrator is a Colpitts oscillator that uses a 7119 tube. It produces clippped sine waves at frequencies from 100kHz to 100MHz and amplitudes from 1mV to 1000mV. The output is 50-ohm GR-874. The signal from the calibration generator is available on the front panel and is also sent to the timing generator through the multi-pin plug-in connector. This allows the timing plug-ins to select "CAL" as a trigger source. In this mode, the calibration generator can be used as the stimulus for the device under test. In many situations, this eliminates the need for external triggering.

The delayed pulse generator is a tunnel diode circuit that produces a negative-going 250mV pulse with a risetime of about 150 ps and a pulse width of about 400 ns. The output is 50-ohm GR-874. When a timing unit (e.g., a 5T1) triggers, it sends a pulse through pin 10 of the J4 interconnect to the delayed pulse generator, which regenerates the pulse. There are three versions of the 661 delayed pulse generator. The first is in serial numbers 101 through 2829. The second version is in serial numbers 2830 through 3459. The third version is in serial numbers 3460 and up. All three versions use a 50mA tunnel diode to generate the actual output pulse. The circuit versions differ in how they bias and trip the output tunnel diode.

Based on the available schematics, the 661 appears to have been designed in 1961. During what years was it manufactured? Why is it that the 661 has a dedicated high-speed coaxial interface between the sampling unit the timing unit while later 560-series sampling systems (3S2, 3T77A, etc.) are able to simply use the regular plug-in connector and mainframe wiring harness for routing trigger and timing signals between the two units?

Some 661s have a multipin connector on the rear panel, perhaps to allow the 661 to be interfaced to low speed data acquisition equipment or a computer.