Hi Folks,
I scored quite nicely at the
Lund auction some time ago. Went to get the stuff (nice roadtrip, snowstorm, nude dancing in front of Swedish customs (don't ask)) so I now have a mountain of scopes to play with. Started with the HP Infinium as it was perhaps the biggest gamble of a all... The description at the auction mentioned: "Including Probes Boot up Fault NTLDR Missing". So, this was going to be as easy as getting a recovery disk, of fumble around a bit with the Windows disk, plug it into another system to replace whatever file is missing, somehting like that. Or.... it could be that the entire drive was bad. Then again it could be easy (any IDE drive would do) or hard (Bios has whitelistes specific types). And I'd have to get the install disk too. So this one had me worried, I still payed 470$ for it...
So, let's get this going!

Eh? Asking for a date and time? That's not something that Windows does if he never got beyond the NTLDR check. This is a happy, fully working Windows! I obviously tried a few times and it booted without complaints every time. Been using the scope on and off for a few weeks now and we get along quite nicely! So, that is alucky break for sure! Next time I booted up the time warning was gone, tested the scope and it works flawlesly. But there's actually something else that will define if I'm actually going to make a buck or two or not: accesories! Chief amongst them: probes. The auction blurb mentioned probes included so this should be good! This is what I got:

Should have gotten 4 probes, got two. On the other hand, what always goes missing? Probe caps! Got three of those. Which is odd. As a reminder: these probes go for
180€ a pop, so yes: probes matter!
But... hold on, what is this??

Oh? Foam inserts? Looks expensive, what is it? It's a E2697A 1M Impedance adapter! Yay! And Farnell tells me
this gear cost a pretty penny. I'm so happy I got a... hold on... The datasheet says:
"The E2697A provides the 1 M? impedance input required by some oscilloscope probes for use with the 5485xA series Infiniium oscilloscopes. In addition, the E2697A has a built-in coupling control which allows you to switch from dc to ac coupling and a built-in attenuation control which alllows you to switch from 10:1 to 1:1 attenuation.". It also is supposed to have another 10074C probe there. Honnestly? I still don't know what this is supposed to do! For probes that require 1M input impedance? The scope provides 50 or 1M? So what is the deal here? I don't get it...
Anyone here that might explain what this can be used for?
I used both this scope and the LeCroy over the past few weeks. The LeCroy obviously has the better specs but the HP is just... more fun I suppose. Looks and feels more modern, easier to use. So while I figured I'd keep the LeCroy and offload the HP, I'm leaning in the other direction now. One problem though: the scope feels... limited: Per example: there's a quick measure button, which is nice, but what about non-quick measurements? No button to setup that. The answer is simple: there's a mouse/keyboard interface too. I'm guessing all the advanced features are there. Only problem: requires a PS/2 mouse and qinch keyboard. I have none of those right now. So next step: get me some more old crap and see what this scope
really can do! So, stay tuned!