I was introduced to trace analysis 25+ years ago when I worked at a component-level repair facility. I built my own octopus, bought an O'scope and got busy fixing my own things! The world is more interesting when you learn something every day!
@iblesbosuok2 жыл бұрын
The world is more interesting when you learn something every day! (R L)
@carlgradolph9676 Жыл бұрын
It may please you to know that, ten years on, you still have some interested viewers. Thanks for concisely demonstrating and explaining this piece of test equipment . Seeing it operate is both fun and illuminating!
@captainjinx427 жыл бұрын
I’m embarrassed to say as an engineer I never worked with the xy mode on my oscilloscope. You now have given me a whole new set of test tools with my 465 thank you so much!
@andymouse4 жыл бұрын
Me too.
@hasantamer91993 жыл бұрын
merhaba hocam osiloskopa nasıl bağladı onu anlamadım siz anladıysanız banada söylermisiniz
@sertacpamukcu3 жыл бұрын
@@hasantamer9199 Osiloskopun CH1 girişini X ve CH2 Girişine Y yi bağlıyorsunuz. Probların Groundları ortak bir tanesini groun olarak bağlamanız yeterli. Red ve Black Probes olarak gösterilen yerlere de bir çif kablo ya da Multimetre Probu / Krokodil uçlu kablo bağlayıp test edeceğiniz komponenti bu uçlara bağlayacaksınız. Osiloskop XY moduna alındığında X yönünde Voltajı, Y Yönünde akımı temsil eden bir grafik çizecek. Açık devre iken yatay çizgi (Direnç sonsuz, akım sıfır), Kısa devre iken Dikey Çizgi (Gerilim sıfır, Akım Sonsuz) vb çizgiler oluşacak.
@hasantamer91993 жыл бұрын
@@sertacpamukcu çok teşekkür ederim
@Dexter-wf3yc2 жыл бұрын
There is a lot of complexity in the world of electronics even in the simplest circuits he he he
@afterthought13810 жыл бұрын
The amount of practical and extensible knowledge provided in this video exceeds that of the first half of most introductory electronics textbooks. I'm consistently impressed with your videos and always look forward to the next.
@radhikagupta70237 жыл бұрын
I've been researching into electronics and found a fantastic resource at Gregs Electro Blog (check it out on google)
@karkoon63647 жыл бұрын
Spam links.
@budapestprojectytc60027 жыл бұрын
And he does so with only one hand.
@rohitchaturvedi22716 жыл бұрын
Radhika Gupta GTFO
@zaizwrogomez19262 ай бұрын
Thank you. It is very good that someone explains so well the use of the oscilloscope to trace the curves that are so important in circuit analysis
@dmottern195212 жыл бұрын
I first became with an octpus aboujt 35 years ago. It was in a U.S. Naval publication published for ET's. Very helpful little tester.Thanks for making the video.
@AMS510004 жыл бұрын
Back in the early 1970s, QST published a schematic for an octopus and I put one together, mainly because I had a cast-off all-tube, purple trace oscilloscope that must have weighed about 100# (my dad picked it up when his university chucked it). Anyway, I was about 14 years old, and I thought the octopus was particularly cool because you could test parts in-circuit. One day my ham transceiver (Henry Radio Tempo One) died. The power supply was blowing fuses immediately. So I decided to look around with the octopus, and rapidly found that one of the discrete silicon rectifiers in the full-wave bridge in the 500v (IIRC) supply was blown (I do not recall whether it had failed open or shorted). In any event, I was able to replace that rectifier and got many more years of fun out that transceiver. It's nice to see that these tools are still in use!
@marpenman12 жыл бұрын
Very nice demonstration! I built one of these in a small box using a couple of BNC's and two pairs of binding posts, and I included a couple of switches to select a current sensing resistor (for 1.0 or 0.1 mA/V display), and an attenuation factor (x1 or x10) for the voltage output. Driving it with a function generator lets you see frequency effects, which is useful. On my 2246 I have to invert the Y channel to get positive current going "up".
@wrongmouse16588 ай бұрын
I was introduced to the component tester, while I was serving in the AF, in the early 70’s and this toy was old then. In the hands of an experienced technician, you could go through a bunch of transistor logic computer boards quick, this includes analog boards. It just takes about a few dozen boards to get the experience you will need for the transistor logic. The analog board where somewhat simpler, due to the fact the failures were sometimes more pronounced, but still had their quirks to work out. The short cut, for analog boards, was to compare a good working board with a bad one, when you had that luxury. Still have mine, that I used in my early days of board repairs. Update: Had to replace the BNC connectors as one was broken and had to get two to mach.
@andybrown36743 жыл бұрын
Thank you. Used this type of device when learning basic electronics in the military in the 70s. Glad to find it again.
@brianhind6149 Жыл бұрын
Great descriptions as always Allan. I was admiring your 465B, in terms of its cosmetic appearance. I would hazard a guess that the 465 series of scopes must have outsold any other model. I have worked around the world, & any lab I had access to always had at least one, & often a number of 465's. Every commercial radio shop in North America had at least one. I also have a 475 that I purchased in a pawn shop, inoperative. The owner asked me for an offer, & I told him that I would have to take the scope apart & have a look before I would make an offer. He looked at me & said " Twenty-five dollars as is. !" I pretended to consider his price , & said " OK, I will take a chance & buy it " He handed me the scope & I handed him the cash, & he said " Hold on Q" He searched through a couple of drawers & came up with a box that had 5 Tek probes, that had never been out of their packaging. The cheapest one of them was over $200. He said " There are five of those like the ones plugged into the scope...give me $5 each for them as a package deal. The best deal I ever made Allan ! I traded three of the probes to an engineer friend & kept two, because I could use the. The 465B & the 475 & the probes are on my service bench to this day. I swear the militaries of the world all had those God awful looking military cased 465s.
@ThePopso11 жыл бұрын
Brilliant video. It explains the theory so clearly. Our component tester, the PinPoint II-R, uses this circuit to great effect, but I've never fully understood just 'HOW' it did it.
@1Rowdy1derful9 жыл бұрын
Back in my day this was a pretty high dollar piece of test gear called a huntron. I couldn't afford one so I designed and built my own much like you have represented here. Absolutely great video.
@hasantamer91993 жыл бұрын
merhaba hocam osiloskopa nasıl bağladı onu anlamadım siz anladıysanız banada söylermisiniz
@ElPasoTubeAmps11 жыл бұрын
I built and used this test circuit for many years while working at WSMR when we still repaired equipment at the component level - as you mention above it is best used to make comparative measurements from known good to a circuit under test. I have fixed many problems using this circuit - thanks for posting it.
@VE3MIJ12 жыл бұрын
I used to use a Huntron Tracker, which was commercially popular for trouble shooting in circuit. Worked great. Also built one in to my old B&K scope decades ago, that I grafted another CRT in to, after buying both for ten bucks each. Today, the only scope I know that has that function built right in, is the Hameg entry level HMO series, along with it's standard MSO capability. It's a great tool on any scope for component testing!
@MrMac515012 жыл бұрын
This is the best, if I did not hear it from you, I would not have known about it, I think some of the old electronic teachers, have about 1 percent of your knowledge. Good Job.
@johnohara542 жыл бұрын
Great tutorial: I did BE+E school in the navy followed by radar”A” school but never did we get into the octopus circuit. I had a small stereo and CD player repair business to make a few dollars after getting out and ran into a former professor from Georgia Tech who briefly mentioned Octopus circuit. Interpreting the “L” from standpoint of voltage and current is straightforward. The oval for the capacitor is unique. I get a kick out of people with a batchelors degree making 50k to 60k while I made 120k at the phone company with an electronics education. LOL
@ericvandeweyer176610 жыл бұрын
We used to use an Octopus many years ago when testing computer boards. We had a unit (later a Huntron) which had a ground and two probes and a circuit which switched between the two probes. Then the ground was connected to both a good board and a bad board at the same spot, usually the ground connection and then the two probes were put onto a test place on each bpoard and the patterns compared is the Octopus switched between the two. This was a very useful test tool.
@billygamer39412 жыл бұрын
I always learn from your presentations. Either new information for me or a different view of something I already know (or think I know!). Thank you.
@Initial_Gain3 жыл бұрын
Yes my scope has a component tester and I used to use it as a double check that the component was faulty. It was very interesting back then. Thank you for the video and explanation.
@ericvandeweyer176610 жыл бұрын
BTW, meant to add that your explanation is excellent.
@karlmartell927911 ай бұрын
Tank you, Mr. n'kay! This was very usefull and very good explained.
@qzorn44408 жыл бұрын
Heath was a great self learning structure and I studied several electronic computer courses. thanks. 5 stars.
@lochinvar004656 жыл бұрын
I first came across this little jewel back in the Navy in the '70's. Was found in one of our technical issues. I built one and used it in the shop.
@Uglydollsrises231326 жыл бұрын
lochinvar00465 NEETS Module 19 has the schematic and goes into a lot of detail...funny though it never refers to process of "Easter-egging..."
@daverockwell546511 жыл бұрын
Thanks alot!! When I saw this I remembered I had one in the garage that I made 35 years ago. Still viable today.
@radiofun23211 жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot for this upload. Added to my favourites, very informative. Also your way to reduce the circuit to its bare essentials. Makes it simple to construct.
@mikem50433 жыл бұрын
That is so cool. Now I want to rig up a tester circuit and check out a bunch of mystery components laying around. Love your videos!
@Bat8hitcrazy Жыл бұрын
My experience with this tool was with Huntron ProTrack I. Loved it, I was a master at finding bad components. Now I'm using a usb o-scope and a scanner. Same thing but with far less capability. Still does the basics though, all you need on average is the low, med1 and med2. But changing the variables is pretty fun though!
@jacka55penguin12 жыл бұрын
Loved the demonstration. Can't wait to try it out myself. I was looking for a curve tracer like I used to use at my old job. This seems much easier to deal with and not too difficult to build. Very cool.
@rbmwiv4 жыл бұрын
Great video. I have been using my octopus for a few years. I love it and use it a lot since most of the things I have to fix are broken due to a component failure. I work on cars and most of the time it’s a bad component or bad solder joint that has happened due to thousands of miles worth of vibration on it. I actually use the octopus more than use my scope in regular mode.
@PatrickInCayman5 жыл бұрын
Excellent video, crystal clear explanation of how a curve tracer functions.
@tanner1985 Жыл бұрын
Mindblowing. I didn't know of this, wonderful!
@yz250ftony5 жыл бұрын
every bench at my place of work has this setup. mostly new equipment with these older scopes setup as tracers...very useful! tempted to build one myself for home.
@radiodf7 жыл бұрын
I first encountered this circuit in Popular Electronics, 8/75. According to the article, this first appeared in a John Rider book in 1935. The name, Octopus, came from folks in the Navy. If you count the number of connections, including a grounded Line cord, you get 8 leads.
@peterlamont6476 жыл бұрын
Neat! This makes me want to grab all the PE mags from the '70s - early '80s. Seems like all the coolest stuff you could build yourself came from/was popularized/widely published around that time period. It makes sense since it was the era of using solid state, but with the lingering memory of the tube era mentality of keeping the circuit dead simple, and very very sparse. If you can make a radio with 5 tubes, you can make a radio with around 10 diodes/transistors etc.
@paulepruss6 жыл бұрын
Yup - I remember the Huntron and building an "Octopus Rig" in the Navy, '80-'85, AD15.
@robertruth32812 жыл бұрын
QUESTIONS - What a wonderful video...and I just now FOUND it! Finally I understand how these work. If you see this... I have a couple of questions..... 1) will this test RF power transistors as well? Can you depend on this to evaluate a good vs bad part? 2) IN a discussion I just saw today (on the merits of doing COMPLETE Electrolytic cap swapouts in radios!)... ONE user said that they use an octopus tester on the electrolytic caps..... Circle? It is good..keep it. Flat line? bad! Replace it. That sounds simple....BUT ... is an octopus tester suitable for "in circuit" tests like that? AND....when using it "in circuit" will the display on the individual component be "reliable" OR can the surrounding components "throw off" the display form.... so that you could not detect a "failed part" or to me... more importantly.... a MARGINAL part? I would want to be sure that I can detect a "flaky part" that could go at any time (IF that is possible! But I would not want the "in circuit" use to affect my ability to test! I am just curious as to your opinions (and anyone else who may care to chime in!) on these questions. Thank you so much for this video!!!!!
@w2aew2 жыл бұрын
This can only be used as a go/no-go tester when you have an example of what the "signature" of a GOOD one looks like.
@samcast100510 жыл бұрын
this is essentially a Huntron! Amazing video, thank you very much
@1beejay14 жыл бұрын
Thank for this video. Explains things in a clear and concise manner!
@clytle3742 жыл бұрын
I recently saw my first transistor used as a zener in the VFO of a Heathkit HW-101. Confused me for quite a while. Good circuit, good video
@aronhighgrove4100 Жыл бұрын
The name octopus likely comes from the looks of common devices. A box (=head) with 5 leads coming all out from one sides (2 bnc cables to the scope, 2 test leads, 1 power cable, or when the power cable is at the back, a "nose" in the center, which is a trim pot/rotary switch to select the voltage).
@onlyeyeno Жыл бұрын
@w2aew Still relevant, instructive and enjoyable ! Thanks for making and sharing :) Best regards
@mdzacharias12 жыл бұрын
Nice! I've used a "curve tracer" for going on 30 years. Also great for in-circuit testing on un-powered circuits. With a little getting used to, can be a great go, no - go tester for troubleshooting.
@jbflores015 жыл бұрын
excellent tutorial on how to use your oscilloscope to test components! now to make an octopus circuit!
@leecampbell94982 жыл бұрын
NOW I understand what it is that my bench tech here uses at the shop to check components out in cct Nice video awesome
@opera57146 ай бұрын
Back in the late 60'sI built about the same thing except with a transistor as a fixed current limiter and a voltage of about 300V. I did a lot of amplifier repair and bought the cheapest low voltage TO-220 transistors. The difference between transistors in a number series was that they were selected. You can't make transistors with particular voltage breakdown. Then I just selected out the higher voltage ones for amplifiers. Lower voltage ones were used in car radios. 95% of 30V rated transistors were well over 120V. On rare occasions I would get one with a squirrely point on the curve but still worked. That went to the dust bin.
@judd_s56432 жыл бұрын
We dedicated a OS-8 oscilloscope as a dedicated Octopus. US Navy early 70’s
@kevinvanlandingham893811 жыл бұрын
Are you plugged into the 120V outlet or function generator? Also, can this be done with a digital oscilloscope? Is the transformer necessary ? Thank you.
@lochinvar004656 жыл бұрын
This is a great tool to test homebrew crystal radio detectors. Trying now to build an old portable tv into a curve tracer using this type of circuit as the interface.
@gordslater11 жыл бұрын
forgot to say, I've used this circuit a few times at higher frequencies (tens-hundreds of kHz) to check out larger inductors and capacitors. You feed the circuit from a signal generator use a "100v line" tranformer - ideal because it will give several tappings and ratios, because the input to it will be far lower than the 120v or 240v mains of a 50/60Hz transformer. Scope X-Y frequency response and the substantial losses in the xformer at kHz frequencies limit the upper usable frequencies
@briand95139 жыл бұрын
Been watching your tutorials, great info and thanks... Well done and very articulate.
@acoustic615 ай бұрын
Great video! I'm wondering if this tests components in circuit? I'd also like to know if it tests high power transistors and MOSFETS the way it's designed? Thanks
@tomsherwood46502 жыл бұрын
A capacitor will an oval. If it has ESR it will tilt the oval. Also you can spot noisy pots, as you move the control the trace will rotate vert horiz and back as you move the pot. If the pot is noisy the line will show noise spikes
@1873Winchester Жыл бұрын
I really like my old Hameg 404-2 it has a built in CT function
@SkazaTV11 жыл бұрын
Its called octopus, beacuse it has 8wires comming out of it
@spectralcodec12 жыл бұрын
Another excellent video that makes me look at my scope in a new way! Thanks and keep up the good work!
@anonhollmuller4032 Жыл бұрын
I use them since education.....around 40 years. a pretty good and fast method to work thru a unknown board. With time you can tell it is a zener 12v or this caoacitor is leaking and so on. I modified myo old hameg this way with swichable voltage and current (with limmitations ). For fast repair it is best for me.... i have a modern component tester .... but it is mostly not neccasary to desolder comonents with the oold method so i stick on that. Sorry for grammatics and so on.....i am not a natural english speaker ;) Best regards from Bavaria.
@wa4aos12 жыл бұрын
Hi Allan, Another Excellent video and TNX OM.. There was a commercial version of this device years ago called the Huntron. and it was a BIG dollar item. Seems like over $500 in the late 70's or early 80's. It may have had a few voltage sets but still a simple overpriced item but helpful. I have a Tek 576 curve tracer in my lab but use this simple tool for a quick check for leaky xsistors/diodes and use it often. It is handy to have a good example for go no go comparisons. 73, Glenn WA4AOS
@J4e8a16n12 жыл бұрын
I love this. If I undestood a bit. The shema you give is a replacement circuit for the in build component tester on your oscilloscope? Unfortunately I dont (see) understand your wiring. Would you show a shema? I have build your octopus but I cant figure how your red probe gives the volatage on every component you touch. JP
@IamDerick7 жыл бұрын
Man I forgot about these, used to use them all the time in the Navy. Need to build me one. 73
@ZilogBob5 жыл бұрын
Thanks for a very clear intelligently-presented video. :)
@gordslater11 жыл бұрын
I *think* they are called an octopus for the following reason: if you make a tabular diagram of the various display responses of components, shorts, opens, diodes, zeners, capacitors, inductors, etc - you end up with a number of vectorgram-like responses. Now, if you then draw all of those responses on top of each other, the result is like an octopus. Google for pics of a greek cross and a saltire - place one on top of the other - a bit like the layout of the Union Flag of the UK +good vid
@Thingumybob_C642 жыл бұрын
I used a Huntron component tester at the company where I worked. It wasn’t cheap. It could do very high frequencies. My professor at community college showed me how to make an octopus. It even had a current limiting potentiometer. I built it and put it in an old project box from the C-band satellite positioner we got rid of decades ago. This octopus is over 30 years old. I used it today to troubleshoot the rail switchers on an Arc 1000.1. It sniffed out bad A06 transistors immediately.
@waynegram89072 жыл бұрын
How do you measure the current transfer ratio in opto couplers? What does the current transfer ratio determine or influence in a circuit?
@carldomanico631211 жыл бұрын
Hi Allan picked up the fuses, They are rated at 1.5 A 250 V, but slow blow..rear of scope indicates fast blow,can I use them ? Replace fuse, just slide out old and slide new in plastic harness, or should I remove screws on harness open a bit slide old out, slide new in replace screws holding plastic harness. Then replace black cover and screw the two screws to secure black cover? Thanks Alan, Carl a Fellow ham N2MFW.
@simonyoungglostog2 жыл бұрын
Excellent. Could you use a signal generator instead of an AC supply?
@w2aew2 жыл бұрын
yes, you could - it will just have a higher output impedance.
@kennethclemenger64173 ай бұрын
For people new to these ccts, tell them Ch 2 Y axis has to be set to INVERT or they may get confused. Scopes are always grounded and the only way these testers match the text books is to invert the Y channel. Also let people know how to move the ground around and that's the real reason youuse a transformer is to float the ground. Using a function generator won't work.
@w2aew3 ай бұрын
Some function generators have a floating output.
@nicholasbantell252011 жыл бұрын
I only wish it was that simple. Your help was greatly appreciated. This is just an old analog scope I had and very rarely used. I found that if I set the Vert mode to Ch. 2 the CRT goes black. Channel one works fine. When it is in X-Y mode it appears to be normal but I am short channel 2 or “X”. Again, thanks and keep sending the great videos. .
@peterlamont6476 жыл бұрын
Why not just repair the scope? Old scopes are much easier to repair...
@ReyciclismoMTB2 жыл бұрын
I love watching your Uber informative video. I know some are old but definitely useful. I love your super clean vintage tek scopes. I a couple of nice ones. But yours look new.
@rafaellarios37072 жыл бұрын
Great video! I built an octopus such like this one and I was able to find a bad capacitor in a snubber circuit which prevented a switching power supply from starting. I had another circuit's power supply which was overloaded and after almost pulling what is left of my hair off, the octopus helped me to find a short circuit between two pins which turned out to be electro chemical migration. Thank you very much for your contribution. I wonder if this can also help in testing 3.3V modern TTL and microcontroller integrated circuits. Greetings from Mexico!
@carldomanico631211 жыл бұрын
hello again Alan, checked the line fuse inside the black box on rear was blown ! iI see they use a 1.5 Amp 250 volt buss i guess? I'm set up for the medium voltage range 115 volts + - 10%. don't have that size here, closest i have is 2 Amps. So I guess radio shack is the next stop. Hope thats it...Maybe I should of brought up the voltage slowly with my variac, since the scope was not powered for some 3-4 years..You know capacitors power supply..I restored a few 30L-1 amps always caps bad..Carl
@ciprianwinerElectronicManiac10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing. Works very nice on every component except coils. Anyway, I just thought I gave it a try and it is a handy tool to have. I personally would not rely on such an instrument because it doesn't give number readings and such so it is a very limited tool from my point of view. Keep up the good work. :)
@Stamatis_Misirlis6 жыл бұрын
Trust me for troubleshooting is way more effective than a number reading. Personally I use this neatmarine.blogspot.com/2018/11/mi.html The reasons component tester is better are: 1) Is instant, faster than your eyes! 2) No need to change probes polarity while check component 3) Check a component behavior in all intermidiate voltages and phase between voltage and current. If you go to component tester, you can't go back.
@simontay48515 жыл бұрын
Wow, that device is amazing! I never even knew it existed. it can do everything. How do i buy one?
@andymouse4 жыл бұрын
@@Stamatis_Misirlis Your completely missing the point.
@andymouse4 жыл бұрын
Your completely missing the point.
@silasfatchett56938 жыл бұрын
Great tutorial, useful information excellently presented. Thanks.
@J4e8a16n12 жыл бұрын
I tried to post a video response to that. I followed you instruction with a diode, . I saw a right angle from left to right and bottom of the screen.. It seem to be duplicate. While playing with the wires I saw a diode caracteristic slope, I could repeat the experiment by keeping the connections loose....
@jez23916 жыл бұрын
Absolutely love this video looks really useful, off down to the lab later to try it out. Thank You
@karlomoharic39927 жыл бұрын
You sir are amazing guy , so much information and at the same time so beautifuly explained
@J4e8a16n11 жыл бұрын
I tried to use my function generator with the octopus but I only get a 45 degrees slope line. I did that last year and it was ok. Maybe I am missing something here.. With the same setup, a transformer gives me the right behavior but the image is no very clean. Is ther a simple answer to that?
@doubledigitdreams3 жыл бұрын
quick noob question for the power supply can a 12v center tap transformer be used? 6-0-6 transformer.
@chrisengland55232 жыл бұрын
Presumably the X input on the oscilloscope has to be inverted because the circuit shown has the earth (0v) in the centre, between the resistor used to measure the current and the voltage across the device under test. If the DUT is a simple resistor, the circuit will show a negative voltage for a positive current. Switching the X input to inverting fixes this.
@w2aew2 жыл бұрын
Yes, I inverted it.
@uzimonkey12 жыл бұрын
Such a useful feature. I wonder why the Tek doesn't have this built in? Also, I just realized that your Tek is blue, mine is green with orange reticle.
@sanjayparelkar39123 жыл бұрын
can i use this technique for measuring resistors in circuit. In my board i have a set of resistor with one end of all resistor connected to VCC and other end connected to different device. How can use this technique
@johnmcgiv14 жыл бұрын
Great demo Alan. Could I ask a question. I have a Hameg scope with component tester I was looking at the different shapes made by different components. I was checking 2200uF 25v and 1000uF25v caps they both displayed a vertical line does this mean they are shorted or open. Smaller capacitance electrolytics showed various ellipses, many thanks again for your excellent tutorials. All the Best for the Festive Season under the circumstances go safe.
@w2aew3 жыл бұрын
They’re likely not shorted. These very large value capacitors have a very low impedance at the tester’s frequency, that’s why they look like a short.
@J4e8a16n11 жыл бұрын
Hi, Thank you so much for the answer. Which leads me to another simple question. Does the elecronic oscilloscope like the OWON SDS5032E-V, 2nd Generation of PDS5022, *New Upgrade* offer the same possibility?
@garygrove14623 жыл бұрын
Enjoyed the X-Y tutorial !! Gary Grove
@spagamoto11 жыл бұрын
Well, I know what my weekend project's going to be. It will be a good use for my recently-acquired function gen :) Thanks!
@polaraligned112 жыл бұрын
Curious what kind of camera you use to make your videos. They are of good quality. Thanks.
@FullElectronic11 жыл бұрын
Ok Thank you! This a great ideia. I mounted a version found in the internet,but dont works with small capacitors,it uses a transformer 60 HZ,using a function generator works great.How you did it,using a transformer or a function generator?
@J4e8a16n12 жыл бұрын
Thank a lot for your help. If I pull channel 1 knob it multiply by 10. It works for diode, zener, capacitor NPN, but: - good resistor give a vertical line - good electrolitic capacitor give a vertical line - the zener like base emitter junction does not show the little hook Has I dont have shorted or open component I cant say fo theese.
@Banzay205 жыл бұрын
thanks for the video! so if you have a capacitor that starting to go bad, would you notice that with this tester or do you need an ESR tester?
@xxxItchyxxx6 жыл бұрын
What a wealth of info for a beginner like me! That's really encouraging, thanks a lot!
@The1jonnyz12 жыл бұрын
I have a Tektronix 422 that is giving me some funny results with my octopus... when I probe a transistor or diode the line goes across the horizontal plane and then goes down instead of up. I have tried everything and am thinking it is something wrong with the scope. This scope does have the separate plug on the right side for the xy mode horizontal, so none of the controls in the channel 2 horizontal area work. Any ideas on what the problem might be?
@ghadley16819 жыл бұрын
Hi, Thank you so much for these wonderful videos, congratulations. I noticed that the flat trace corresponding to no current and also the sine wave itself is a bit wavey, is this due to the scope itself? And any suggestions as from where to buy such wonderful vintage scopes you are using, professionally refurbished and reliable? Just thrilling how the controls sound and the equipment looks and feels. Thanks so much.
@SorinG20105 жыл бұрын
Hi great video, I was wondering if you did take a look at your heath 4552 scope schematic in particular at the component testing section. I would love to see that. Could not find schematic online anywhere.
@tommywright673711 жыл бұрын
Hello, I have an older tektronix oscilloscope which has xy mode, I made an octopus circuit I found online and followed the circuit diagram exact.The curve tracer is working but for some odd reason it seems that the patterns may be inverse as to what they should be. The examples from the link I posted shows the resistor signature as going up and to the right, when I test resisters I get the opposite, the angle goes up and to the left. Is it my scope or the circuit?
@dd03565 жыл бұрын
thanks for introducing octopuss
@jondesensi15432 жыл бұрын
What a brilliant video. Is it possible to test capacitor and resistance for linearity using an oscilloscope in xy mode?😀
@EnricoCotulelli3 жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot, always learning something new
@SuperJetjockey10 жыл бұрын
What about using an auto_transformer as the power source. The reason I am asking this, is because I have my auto-transformer connected to the output of my isolation transformer, and there is another circuit that was published in an old Wayne Green publication back in the early 1970s, that used 150 volts and a much larger series resister to test the breakdown charistics of Zeners. All I would have to do, is plug in a low voltage circuit, such as the one you used, to find all the good candidates, then plug in my higher voltage circuit when I wanted to look for high power Zeners, or high voltage power transistors. Could you do a video on amplified Zeners? I enjoy your easily understandable videos.
@w2aew10 жыл бұрын
Yes, you certainly could use a higher voltage to test zeners and other devices for high voltage breakdown. As always, use extreme care when dealing with line voltage, or any voltage more than 30-40V.
@kirkpennock29977 жыл бұрын
I've always wondered how they worked thanks.
@burtlade17055 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
@electronicatutorial11 жыл бұрын
Hi, Alan what do you think of the top of your head what is a better tracer a Tek 577 (analog) or a Tek 571 (digital). I personally will go for the digital because of the screen readouts but I know the analog has a better control and response.What are their main differences? is price is about the same now.
@Mr_Smith_3697 жыл бұрын
w2aew I have found that it is possible to use more than 2 probes. When testing 3 legged components you can use another probe from the positive terminal to see how it will behave when ON, or connecting the third probe to negative shows how it will react when off. I have found this very helpfull with triacs and SCRs. (good material for another vid) Many THANK YOUs for your contribution to humanity
@Mr_Smith_3697 жыл бұрын
Instead of a transformer connected to mains, i have also tried a freq. gen. to see responses to changes in freq.