230

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The Tektronix 230 is a digital readout introduced in 1967 for the 568 sampling oscilloscope. The 568 and 230 replaced the 567 and its digital unit plug-ins, the 6R1 and 6R1A. Unlike the 6R1 and 6R1A, the 230 is freestanding unit, not a plug-in. Just like the 6R1A was an evolutionary step forward from the 6R1, the circuitry in the 230 is an evolutionary step forward from the 6R1A. The 230 does not contain any tubes or tunnel diodes. It makes some use of integrated circuits and extensive use of [reed relays].

The 230 is programmable, which means that its circuitry can be controlled remotely, using multipin connectors located on the rear panel. The rear panel contains six connectors, four for remote control, one for connection to the 568 oscilloscope, and one that provides a binary-coded decimal representation of the number that is displayed on the digital readout on the 230. Like the 6R1 and 6R1A, the 230 allows upper and lower limits to be set on voltage or time, and it has front-panel lamps and rear panel signals that show whether the current measurement is below the lower limit, within the limits, or above the upper limit.

The power supply in the Tektronix 230 is linear and provides regulated of +50V, +12V, +3.8V, +1.75V, -3.5V, and -50V. It also provides a +255V unregulated output. The power supply transformer, electrolytic capacitors, and output transistors are part of the chassis, not a removable unit. The regulator circuits are on a circuit card.

The minimal system configuration with a 230 is just the 230 connected to the 568. Five out of six of the connectors on the rear panel of the 230 can be ignored for basic use. J101 on the rear of the 230 connects to the J101 on the rear of the 568. This connection is required since it brings the sampled signal from the 568 to the 230. The 230 does not control the 568. The 568 sends signals and the 230 displays them on the Nixie readout and generates control signals on its rear panel connectors. One exception to this is the CRT intensifier signal, which is sent by the 230 to the 568. This signal intensifies the trace in the various zones, which are configured on the 230 or remotely using a 241 programmer.

Most of the circuitry of the 230 is on circuit cards that plug into a backplane bus.