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:[[User:Kurt]], 30 Jun 2018 | :[[User:Kurt]], 30 Jun 2018 | ||
:The NT-7000 was not designed and built by Tektronix Germany. It was designed and built by a small start up company, Oregon Analog Tools, located in Portland OR. Tektronix Germany must have signed an OEM agreement with OAT. The purpose of the NT-7000 was to provide power and signal out from a [[7A13]]. The target market was SMPS designers, as a differential amplifier with fast over drive recovery is required to make many of the measurements on the switching devices. When Tek discontinued the 11000 series with the [[11A33]], no suitable product was | :The NT-7000 was not designed and built by Tektronix Germany. It was designed and built by a small start up company, Oregon Analog Tools, located in Portland OR. Tektronix Germany must have signed an OEM agreement with OAT. The purpose of the NT-7000 was to provide power and signal out from a [[7A13]]. The target market was SMPS designers, as a differential amplifier with fast over drive recovery is required to make many of the measurements on the switching devices. When Tek discontinued the 11000 series with the [[11A33]], no suitable product was available, although the market still needed a solution. | ||
:This unfilled need lead to the creation of another start-up - Preamble Instruments formed by former Tek employees. The president was an experienced SMPS designer. I was the engineering manager of Preamble Instruments. The NT-7000 was considered a competitor, but OAT did not have much marketing and few potential customers | :This unfilled need lead to the creation of another start-up - Preamble Instruments formed by former Tek employees. The president was an experienced SMPS designer. I was the engineering manager of Preamble Instruments. The NT-7000 was considered a competitor, but OAT did not have much marketing and few potential customers knew of it. Preamble designed the [[Preamble DA1855|DA-1855]], an updated version of the 7A13. The principle designer was [[John Addis]], a skilled analog design engineer also from Tektronix. Preamble Instruments was purchased by LeCroy in 1998, and became their active probe and signal conditioner design center. | ||
:[[User:SteveS]], 13 Nov 2018 | :[[User:SteveS]], 13 Nov 2018 | ||
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