Alright. I've gone back and forth the diagram, read the comprehensive
manual, looked for possible leaking capacitors both on paper and on the
circuit. Nothing.
Then I checked the "modern" 0.1 ohm
resistor on the lower side of the PCB fitted in place of a broken trace.
One side is grounded. So I followed ground traces to nearby components
suspecting a ground loop but this is what I saw:
Almost
5 mm of missing (ground) trace! And it is on the biasing network around
the dual-slope integrator. The result was an impedance mismatch causing
stray currents and disturbing the integrator.
A piece of
resistor leg was promptly used to rebuild the exposed trace and I
anxiously powered up the multimeter (still without the AC converter
board). Numbers were shown, didn't flicker or runaway but did not make sense. OPS! I forgot to press one of the "mode" buttons. So I got a stable, not null reading.
I shorted
V/ohm input and turned the zero calibration pot as described in the
manual. I had moved it around when troubleshooting. VoilĂ ! The Weston Schlumberger 1240 multimeter is with me again!
I have no idea how I managed to pull away that piece of track. Perhaps with time it has "glued" to a floating cable coming from the front panel, or .. well, it's fixed now!
16 December 2017
02 December 2017
New instrument in the lab: Schlumberger 1240 multimeter
During one of my time travels in
the 1970's I brought home a Nixie-based multimeter: Schlumberger 1240.
Three and half digits in a compact desktop case. It is the same
instrument of Weston 1240, and the Heathkit IM-102 shares a lot with
them.
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| Schlumberger (Weston) 1240 multimeter from circa 1972. |
It was given away as working except for the 200mA scale.
Not a big deal if you want ot make a clock out of it, no? The first
power up confirmed both its working state and my suspicion that the half
digit neon bulb was broken. Just feed a variable voltage in the 20 V
scale and let it go beyond 9.99 V. Time to open it up, without a
manual/diagram/parts list to be found online.
Well, Weston
made also model 1242, a 4.5 digits multimeter that is aestetically
similar, and the manual is available online (not complete and some pages
were poorly scanned). At least it shows how to extract the circuit
board.
| Top of the board with discrete logic. |
Two notches later, I had the two-layer through-hole
board on my desk. Meet another 1970's hand-drawn PCB, with charming
curvy traces and no ground plane! There are three Burroughs B5855S Nixies.
The "half digit" was a
25 mm tall neon lamp with an illuminated bar of about 15 mm and long
leads. Initially I suspected the driver transistor was gone but I begun
removing the lamp first: only two solder points to redo in case it works
rather than three short leads of the transistor. Well, one lamp leg broke in
the process and I couldn't lit it with my high voltage DC source.
| Bottom of the board with curvy traces! |
Looks like it is not easy to source a neon bulb with this size in 2017, and temporarily a shorter one will do the job.
But something else happened ...
Etichette:
equipment,
fixITcozITSbroken,
nixie
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