Products > Test Equipment
Soviet Oscilloscopes (Made in USSR)
David Hess:
I remember reading a comment from a Soviet researcher who said, "Unless the lab equipment was made for the Soviet military, it did not work well."
madires:
Some of the Russian and East German T&M was also sold in West Germany, often rebranded by the importer. For example, Conrad was selling a few scopes made in East Germany under their VoltCraft brand, and Völkner was offering Soviet scopes under their original names.
Pawelr98:
I own an S1-107 portable analog oscilloscope. 5MHz bandwidth on a single channel, yet it also has XY mode, with separate X input, multimeter functionality (values displayed on the screen) and can run off 220Vac/115Vac and 27VDC.
At 27VDC it draws around 0.5A while internal DC voltage levels under typical mains operation (30+V) allow to power it directly from an 7S Li-ion battery pack.
Chris56000:
Hi!
Can anyone tell me the part no. in Cyrillic of the 4 way Russian in–line female connector that goes in the multimeter front panel plug of the C1–112A please?
Also, has anyone got a complete (Cyrillic will do!) Technical Book for the C1–112/C1–112A oscilloscope they can scan or point me in the direction of please?
The complete books have transformer winding specs and full parts lists in them, and I could do with the parts list, etc!
I've won a c1–112 on the evilbay with a suspect mains transformer, and if I can get the whole book, rather than the circuit on it's own, I can extract the transformer info from it!
Chris Williams
IAmBack:
Is this helpful?
https://www.kipis.ru/upload/kipis_articles/article_c1-112.pdf
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