So for my first post I decided to do a teardown and since I can't turn it on (no-one where I live had heard of a fuse smaller than half an amp) I'm taking it apart.
What I have for you today is a Takeda Riken TR6878 6.5 digit multimeter, brand new in 1984 (designed in 83). It's somewhat different from most multimeters in that it doesn't have any AC capability and I'm not even sure how low it measures in the dc ranges as I can't yet turn it on and there is zero documentation to be had for it online or other that I can find.
Features of note: 2-4 wire ohms with and without guard, front and rear input (rear has triax for the milliamp and below? range), GP-IB, sampling? and lastly some sort of compute functions just how complex some of you might know from looking at the front panel section for it but again no manual so its going to be see as I go.
I'm still very in the realm of amateur hobbyist so anything you can give me in advice on how to best operate this beast would be very welcome
And now for the pictures, please forgive the bad photography, I have terrible lighting and had to flash a few shots
Starting with the reference, who doesn't like to know what makes these things accurate? yes its a zener, what type I couldn't even begin to say as its made by Takeda Riken in-house and has 3 leads.
The lovely hybrid, on its own machined aluminum block, guessing there is a bit of stuff going on inside the block but I'm not rushing to pull it apart, even for science.
The front and rear inputs to the board, the giant blue blobs are inductors for those not familiar with this style.
A touch of input switching, there interestingly enough appears to be absolutely no input protection that I can find.
The analog power supply section with a beautiful example of star grounding. They also thoughtfully have provided nicely labelled testpoints everywhere for the power rails and outputs/critical functions, quite the service techs dream.
Ohms and amps section, lots of high impedance magic and unobtainium here. Also a lot of lm339's and 74 series logic.
This mysterious black thing is actually a Takeda Riken 1 ohm precision resistor.
The A/D section, complete with scary amounts more unobtainium and high impedance hybrids. The large black things are just potted caps.
And the last section of the analogue board, control, complete with a fujitsu mb60h125, guessing a 8/16bit micro? and a pile of what seem to be hand wound pulse transformers to isolate the analogue and digital boards.
Now on to the digital side of things. Firstly the 8086 is fairly self explanatory, along with a good amount of 74 series logic and an interrupt controller and interval timer as peripherals. Oh and some more pulse transformers, they didn't all fit on the other board.
Next up we have some SRAM a whopping 8k per package, some socketed roms and a NEC 8279 keyboard and display driver. I will have to get a reader to pull the data from the roms in the off chance there is someone who wants it.
Also of interesting note the large ceramic cap is the only connection between the chassis and the internal components, literally everything else is insulated and floating.
Lastly on the internal side of things we have the GP-IB controller and a couple more ram chips socketed this time. They're 2k and slower so I guess for the GP-IB controllers use? and yes that battery is as dead as a doornail, hopefully the only thing wrong with this unit as it was bought as not working(hopefully no repair thread in the future).
Onto the outside. For those of you that have made it this far you may want to take a break, stand up/get some water
we're almost done.
On the front we have happily a led segment display with a couple of led dot matrix character segments on the right (which better not break as I've never seen anything like them before). All the function selection and compute is entered on the front along with the front input jacks. There is also a button for shorting/opening the guard to neutral, this applies for both the front and back inputs at the same time.
Not much of interest on the back apart from the mAmps Triax input which I likely wont be using anytime soon as to buy a new cable for it is over twice what I paid for the instrument itself. I have been following with close interest those attempting their own triax cable and may go down that path if I need the ultra precise measurements in the future.
So there you have it, one more piece of gear from the 80's in its full glory. If anyone would like better pictures of any part of it and/or a more in depth examination do let me know.
Also if anyone can think of a reasonable use for any of the slightly more esoteric compute functions I would love to hear from you, I don't really actually need a 6.5 digit multimeter by any means, I just got it as a birthday present to myself because I wanted something other than tv's to fix.
Thank you for sitting through my first teardown. Any and all constructive criticism of my posting I would really appreciate, I have some more gear I've been given which I wouldn't mind taking a peak inside and sharing with you all and getting a better idea of how to go about it would be great.