Move over Einstein!!!

Next is SPC...


This scope was my first electronics project two years ago and it still brings great pleasure. One of the toughest and frustrating experiences. No way of knowing where the fault is, just keep doing continuity tests after continuity tests. And never knowing if the repair works until it's all buttoned back up. All due to damaged traces from leaking capacitors! I can get in and out of this scope now in seconds, blind-folded


Again, the reason why I even attempted the repair on this second attenuator board was because I'm recapping the backplane board next. Those capacitors came in yesterday too.
Anyway, I'm doing probe tests for each of the four channels now...
Channel 1 through 4:




Notice how the scope didn't know it's a Leap Year. Maybe it never dreamt it would still be around

So here's the recapped Backplane board too, part number 671-1676-02. I used long-life, low-ESR Nichicon capacitors for the replacements. And to let you know, I smelled that funky electrolyte odor when desoldering two of the old Nichicon capacitors. I didn't see any leakage on the board but, maybe, they were just starting to leak? I don't know, but she's back in tip-top shape now:


I would see it wise to "reform" the new capacitors before you install them. That is, do leakage tests on them at rated voltage for about a minute each. This will break them in and make the fresh start-up of the oscilloscope go smoothly. Don't install them straight out of the package.
...and since the Centronics/RS-232 board used the same capacitors (220uf 35v), I refreshed them too.

Plus, I replaced both batteries which attach to the CPU and DSP boards. I soldered leads to the back of the boards and fed 3VDC while the new Lithium cells were swapped-out so to not lose memory. One of the old batteries read 2.53VDC. The FFT math was retained.
Bad to the bone!
