1220
The Tektronix 1220 is a logic analyzer introduced in 1988 that supports 16 to 32 channels, 100 MHz asynchronous, 25 MHz synchronous. It is equivalent to the Tektronix 1225 but has two 16-bit probe ports instead of three. It is also very similar to the to the Tektronix 1230.
The 1220/1230 series was an effort by Tektronix to make an "easy to use" logic analyzer aimed at students and engineers. The user interface clearly represents that mindset. The menus are simple and there are help guides everywhere guiding the user in what he might want to do.
The 1230 did not have the same expansion capability that the 1230 had. The only expansion available were the option boards, of which four were available − parallel printer interface, RS-232 interface, GPIB interface, and on-line notes in foreign languages. Tektronix also had a software package (S43R101) that would run on IBM PC compatible machines.
See the Microprocessor support table for microprocessor disassembly configuration options.
Key Specifications
Probes | either P6442, P6443 or P6444 (16-channel) |
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Number of channels | 32 channels |
CRT | 13 x 10 cm |
Power | 90-250 V |
Weight | 8.2 kg (18 lb.) |
Features |
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Internals
The 1220 is built around a 65C02 as the control processor with 48K of SRAM, and 64K of firmware in a bank of EPROMs. There is a separate board under it that manages the display and keypad, which is powered by another 65C02 CPU and is using an MC68A45 CRT controller to drive the display. The display board has 56K of RAM and 8K of ROM, with two coin cell batteries to retain settings. There is a bug that prevents the 1225 from keeping the date after the year 2000. Upon powering it off and on again it will revert to 19xx, e.g. 2018 will turn into 1918.
Easter egg
An "Easter egg" can be activated in the 1225 by pressing the STOP button when the welcome screen shows during power-up. A bar with the programmers' names will display near the bottom of the screen.
Links
Pictures
Thanks to Keith Neufeld for the pictures!