tggzzz wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 2:05 pm
He's been conditioned by the recent (i.e. <25 years old) religion that all comments are out of date and don't correspond to what you find in front of you.
(Having said that, even with hardware there is a little truth there, e.g. there are at least 4 variants of the schematic for the tuner I'm repairing)
Tek and HP were generally very good at documenting all hardware changes. HP issued updates for manuals. There are also good support communities on the WWW.
Some other makers, such as Hameg, weren't always fully up to speed, particularly with their higher end models. My early version of the HM1005 100MHz scope has Y pre amps and a final Y amp significantly different from those in later versions, which are what is covered in the commonly available version of the manual. The HM 605 60MHz scope is a very late model and has an EHT about 300V greater than in the manual and the high voltage for the final X and Y amps is also different. They moved to another slightly different CRT and had to make modifications.
I saw someone selling a late version of a Hameg 20MHz scope, an HM203/7. He was selling it for very little because it had a power supply fault. He couldn't fix it and was offering it at a low price, because towards the end, Hameg had swapped from the linear PSUs they'd been using for years, to an SMPS, but no documentation was available for it.
For some pieces of kit, user manuals can be hard to find, and circuit diagrams, leave alone a service manual with set up procedures, are not to be had, even if you are happy to pay for them.
A circuit diagram, even if it doesn't include the variations your specimen has, or even it it refers to a different model in the same series, is a lot better than nothing.