EEVblog Electronics Community Forum
Electronics => Repair => Topic started by: MaxFrister on July 22, 2018, 05:41:14 pm
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I recently acquired an HP 122AR oscilloscope for $11.56 USD.
(https://www.eevblog.com/forum/repair/hewlett-packard-122ar-restoration/?action=dlattach;attach=481583;image)
This is an interesting machine. It was introduced in 1958 and produced, I believe until the early 1970’s We don’t see many contemporary tech products made for a decade or more…
This was an early scope for Hewlett Packard but already has many of the features we expect on a “modern” analog scope: dual calibrated display, chop and alt, auto-trigger, B-A display, XY display, etc. It has at least one feature that surprised me: balanced (isolated ground) inputs.
It has an amazing 200Khz of bandwidth and was sold as an economical scope, costing about $625 in 1959. It was intended for low-frequency applications including audio; HP made a higher-bandwidth scope and soon introduced another.
This particular machine is painted a non-standard color and badged as “Ling electronics”. Ling made (makes?) vibration analysis systems.
The 122AR has 25 vacuum tubes, numerous neon bulbs (used as voltage references) and 2 transistors! Those lonely transistors serve an interesting purpose: they are the pass transistors for the 24V rail used for the filaments of the vertical amplifier tubes.
The 2 transistors provide a nice symmetry to my circa 1966 Tektronix 453 — it has many transistors and just 2 vacuum tubes (also in the power supply).
This machine arrived filthy inside and out. I disassembled it and cleaned it by hand. I know that people hose these machines out, but I was not that brave. A quick spot check showed that electrolytics were gone. The machine showed signs of a long, useful life: pencil marks from previous technicians and a variety of tube brands. The last calibration sticker was 1986.
Despite its huge size (and weight), this was a difficult machine to work on. Many components are packed around the selector switches or jammed in small areas:
(https://www.eevblog.com/forum/repair/hewlett-packard-122ar-restoration/?action=dlattach;attach=481589;image)
(https://www.eevblog.com/forum/repair/hewlett-packard-122ar-restoration/?action=dlattach;attach=481595;image)
Because there was no place to fit new standoffs I ended up “restuffing” the old electrolyic cans. Fortunately most of the tubes were okay:
(https://www.eevblog.com/forum/repair/hewlett-packard-122ar-restoration/?action=dlattach;attach=481601;image)
Last night, after many many hours of work, I was finally able to power on the machine:
(https://www.eevblog.com/forum/repair/hewlett-packard-122ar-restoration/?action=dlattach;attach=481607;image)
It still needs some testing and a thorough calibration but I was relieved to see it power-up without smoke. I’ll also need to make space in the rack.
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That looks really good. I'm glad someone is out there rescuing this old stuff.
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Apparently I’m not done with this quite yet. This machine was last calibrated in 1986 and contains 1 tube with a 1985 date code (the earliest is a 1942 tube).
In working through the calibration procedure, I found 2 problems:
The B channel amplitude changes 6.3% with 127V AC (limit is 3%). The A channel is stable, so this is probably a tube in the B vertical amplifier.
I am unable to compensate the B channel in the 10V range. I’m guessing this is unrelated to #1 and is some component in the B attenuator.
Next I’ll try swapping tubes between A and B and to look closely at the attenuators.