Products > Test Equipment
Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) group therapy thread
Specmaster:
--- Quote from: BillB on June 14, 2018, 10:31:27 pm ---
--- Quote from: bd139 on June 14, 2018, 09:21:13 pm ---It’s a trap!
...
Hmmmmmm what will it really cost me? :-\
--- End quote ---
Yeah, I hadn't thought of that. She did seem to offer it up rather quickly. ;)
--- Quote from: bitseeker on June 14, 2018, 10:14:06 pm ---Probably the reason there's no talk of TEA remission is because it doesn't exist. What you're experiencing is just TEA fatigue, a temporary condition that can fool you into thinking you're in remission, only to have your TEA return just when you think you're cured.
--- End quote ---
That must be what's going on. :)
--- End quote ---
Does your wife drive your car, if so check it for new dings, might explain a lot :-DD
bd139:
TEA fatigue definitely exists. Been there.
It occurs at these points for me:
1. When all your scopes are broken, again.
2. When you've applied the third sticky plaster after something has drawn blood.
3. When you nearly get shot in the face by a cap.
4. When you've got so many cardboard boxes and packaging floating around from deliveries that you can't actually move.
5. When your wife gives you "the look" after something explodes on the dining table.
6. When you find someone else has been at what you've just bought and used a pozidrive on the all the philips screws and buggered them.
7. When you bang your head on the desk after something fell out of the scope you are working on and you go and fetch it.
8. When you find that the one critical page you want in the service manual you downloaded is more pixelated than some Japanese genitals.
BillB:
--- Quote from: Specmaster ---Does your wife drive your car, if so check it for new dings, might explain a lot :-DD
--- End quote ---
Well she did mention this evening that she's already earmarked her bonus for saving up for some piece of jewelry.
Seriously though, I can't complain. We're co-enablers for each others addictions...
That's probably not good thing. :palm:
Specmaster:
--- Quote from: bd139 on June 14, 2018, 10:40:36 pm ---TEA fatigue definitely exists. Been there.
It occurs at these points for me:
1. When all your scopes are broken, again.
2. When you've applied the third sticky plaster after something has drawn blood.
3. When you nearly get shot in the face by a cap.
4. When you've got so many cardboard boxes and packaging floating around from deliveries that you can't actually move.
5. When your wife gives you "the look" after something explodes on the dining table.
6. When you find someone else has been at what you've just bought and used a pozidrive on the all the philips screws and buggered them.
7. When you bang your head on the desk after something fell out of the scope you are working on and you go and fetch it.
8. When you find that the one critical page you want in the service manual you downloaded is more pixelated than some Japanese genitals.
--- End quote ---
Item 8 explains a lot about your viewing habits :-DD
Specmaster:
--- Quote from: bd139 on June 14, 2018, 10:08:18 pm ---Have a search around for sister models of the 3390B. There was a 3394B, 3390B, 3384B and 3380B in the same series. Probably same documentation and feature set but with different options/bandwidth.
--- End quote ---
Yeah, I'm going to do that later, currently I'm working my way through the users manual which gives a tutorial on how to use it, hell I never knew that you can so much with digital processing, this thing is so amazing, it can even store several user defined setups and can also make digital mode almost look as if its in analogue mode with traces that are so noise free its almost impossible to tell them apart.
Maybe one of these scopes could be the solution to your on/off relationship with your Rigol scope and 465's, both in the same unit and from what I've seen with regard to the traces on a Rigol, it would be a far superior setup at reduced cost?
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