Opinions? Any other differences I'm missing? Are they both bad models?
There is nothing wrong with either. The 7633 is more complicated to maintain and use.
I should mention that this would be my first usable scope at home, and I can't currently afford a new digital scope, so I'm hoping to get a good deal on an older one.
You do not say where you are in Canada but my usual recommendation for beginners on a budget if they do not have help is to find an analog oscilloscope which verifiably works. That might be a 7000 mainframe and plugins but would more likely be a 2225 or 2235 or some other portable.
Which plug-ins should I be excited/disappointed to find in them?
The typical loadout of plug-ins for these is a 7B53A timebase and a pair of 7A18 dual trace vertical amplifiers. Sometimes 7A26s replace the 7A18s because they are a little faster and provide a very useful 20 MHz bandwidth limit function.
The unusually useful vertical amplifiers are the 100 MHz 7A13 differential comparator and the 1 MHz 10uV/div 7A22 differential amplifier.
There are too many other options to discuss without more specifics.
A dual timebase is a must, unless you don't care about seeing before/after the trigger.
No timebase will not help seeing what happens before the trigger (1); that is what the mainframe's fixed delay line is for which gives about 20ns with a slow timebase (7B53A) and 40ns with a fast timebase (7B50A) on a 7603 or 7633.
Some of the single timebases (7B50A, 7B80) support automatic peak-to-peak triggering which is a nice reason to use them if you do not need the delayed timebase.
The 7B53A annoyingly only supports mixed sweep. If you want alternate sweep, then use a 7B92A.
If you have to ask, then the answer is that you don't need them.
A beginner should only buy a working scope.
I agree. See below.
I have two or three of these scopes and lots of plugins. Many of the plugins have reached the end of their service life after who knows how many years of constant use. Luckily they are so cheap you don't have to even worry about fixing them as many times the parts cost more than buying another plugin. Many of the switches and knobs are broken beyond repair and I even went so far as to mold knobs. That's the real issue, switches and knobs vs capacitors. And I forget, lots of burned in tubes.
They are great oscilloscopes but be prepared to do significant maintenance including calibration and possibly a complete rebuild.
These mainframes are especially worth the trouble if you have a use for the more specialized vertical amplifiers like the differential 7A13 and 7A22.
And the last price I paid for a 7603 loaded with a unique volt meter plugin was $70 from Craigslist.
Somehow even without looking to, I have ended up with two perfectly working 7D13 multimeters. I do not have much use for them but wow their function control has an awesome feel.
Analog storage CRTs are much dimmer than non-storage CRTs.
I would describe the 7633's CRT as dim and murky. So, I wouldn't recommend it unless you particularly want a storage scope.
The 7603 was not the brightest or sharpest to start with so the 7633 is not bad compared to one of the really bright and sharp CRTs like the 7704A or 7904. My 7834 storage mainframe seems about as bright and clear as my 7603 but my 7904 puts them both and every other oscilloscope I have to shame.
Also, these scopes tend to have low MTBF. This is just because they have many hundreds of parts. It's not a good idea to buy one unless you have another scope available to help fix it when it breaks.
Luckily most of the part failures are common ones and not the custom ones and the custom parts are not that difficult to find.
Another working oscilloscope is a good idea for maintaining these.
But it's actually nice to have a storage mainframe with the non-storage SAs, samplers, and curve tracers. I would pick the 7613 over the 7633 though.
I was wondering which would look best with my 7CT1N and sampling plug-ins so I asked about this over on the TekScopes@yahoogroups.com email list and the consensus was that the 7633 storage display looks as good as the 7613 storage display.