524

From TekWiki
Revision as of 06:56, 27 September 2014 by Peter (talk | contribs) (link)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
{{{manufacturer}}} 
TV waveform monitoring scope
Tek 524

Produced from 1953 to (?)

Manuals
(All manuals in PDF format unless noted otherwise)
Manuals – Specifications – Links – Pictures

The Tektronix 524 is an oscilloscope introduced in 1953 for monitoring television waveforms. It is a monolithic oscilloscope. It was designed by Cliff Moulton.

Interestingly, the 524 appears on page 33 of the 1966 RCA Test Equipment Catalog.

Key Specifications

  • please add

The 524 weighs 61 pounds, uses 500 watts, and has a thermal cutoff. It uses selenium rectifiers in the low-voltage power supply. It has a total of 4 kV CRT beam acceleration, -1.5 kV on the cathode and +2.5 kV on the anode. It normally came with a 5ABP1 CRT which has P1 phosphor, but P7 and P11 phosphors were also available.

Internals

The vertical signal path of the 524 is similar to that of the 514. They have similar front-ends and similar distributed vertical output amplifiers.

The video trigger circuitry present in the 524 distinguish it from the 514. Just before the L-C delay line in the vertical signal path, there is a cathode follower, V15A, that serves as the trigger pickoff buffer. The resulting trigger signal goes to a video sync separator circuit. Here, the there is clamping and amplification and, most importantly, a non-retriggerable multivibrator. The multivibrator is triggered by the vertical sync of the NTSC waveform. After being triggered, it is not triggerable again for about about 25 ms, so it misses the vertical sync of the next interlaced field and instead triggers on the vertical sync of one following that. So it consistently shows the "even" field or the "odd" field. There is a switch that perturbs the multivibrator so it can be switched between even and odd fields. The video trigger circuit drives a conventional trigger circuit and sweep circuit similar to that of the 514.

The 524 uses a cylindrical style of ceramic terminal strip, which is less common than the straight style. The cylindrical style is also used in the Type C and Type CA.

Pictures