Products > Test Equipment
Old HP 1651B Logic Analyzer cable question
Squiddaddy:
I bought an HP 1651B Logic Analyzer a while back, and have been working on getting it running.
It was missing every accessory, so I began my scavenger hunt. But it was $10, so I wasn't complaining.
I got a working boot disk, and can boot the unit fine. Was able to make spares.
I also got both of the jumper pods.
But I cannot locate the cables to connect the pods to the unit.
These are different than the ones you find on Ebay.
Those are dual connectors, Pod1/2, Pod 3/4, etc.
My unit only uses the single cables, one for Pod 1 and one for Pod 2.
In a pinch, could I use the 40 pin IDE computer cables, or will that introduce too much noise?
Or does anyone have any sources for the correct cables?
Thanks!
oPossum:
If you make your own cables then you must use the compensation network shown on page 74. The HP/Agilent cables have this in each probe lead. Using ordinary ribbon cable can work but the cable used by HP/Agilent was quite special and works better.
https://www.keysight.com/us/en/assets/7018-06707/data-sheets/5968-4632.pdf
Squiddaddy:
Thanks for that reply.
I have both of the pods and all the grabbers.
I'm just missing the ribbon cables that connect the pod to the unit.
It looks like a 40 pin ribbon.
tautech:
An 80 conductor 40 pin IDE cable could be what you're looking for for better noise specs.
alm:
The originals were either twisted pairs (the early woven cable) or tiny coaxial leads. In either case, the cables were lossy (resistive) similar to the wire used for passive oscilloscope probes
I'm not sure if a 80 conductor ATA cable would be much better than a plain 40 conductor cable, since every other pin is a ground anyway. I would expect inferior signal integrity (noise immunity, crosstalk, emitted EMI, ringing) from using standard ribbon cables. Whether it's enough to cause trouble would be for you to decide.
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