home bbs files messages ]

Forums before death by AOL, social media and spammers... "We can't have nice things"

   rec.audio.tubes      Tube-based amplifiers... that go to 11      52,877 messages   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]

   Message 51,899 of 52,877   
   Bruce Esquibel to Trailboss   
   Re: Sencore LC53 VS Sprague TelOhmike 6A   
   20 Oct 12 13:46:01   
   
   From: bje@ripco.com   
      
   Trailboss  wrote:   
   > Disregarding the inductor function of the Sencore, what advantages,   
   > disadvantages for testing caps commonly found in audio amps. I have restored   
   > and calibrated a TelOhmike 6A and have used it to full advantage for many   
   > years, and it don't lie,,,,, but I am a test equipment junkie always looking   
   > for higher precision more efficient gear. I don't like replacing components   
   > unnecessarily and with the skyrocketing cost of electrolytics and decent   
   > signal caps, as well as maintaining originality to vintage equipment I am   
   > finding the cap analyzer the most important/most used piece of test gear on   
   > my bench.   
      
   For what it's worth, I've owned one of the LC53's since they were introduced   
   and it never impressed me. It does work as advertised, but with the hype   
   Sencore puts into it, it's not much to write about in the long run.   
      
   I actually bought it for the inductor tests, figuring out what unmarked   
   coils and chokes were, later for the cap tests. It may have "found" a couple   
   electrolytics borderline bad that another meter would of missed, but I never   
   considered that thing worth the asking price.   
      
   I'm just saying, the meter as a whole, inductor and cap testing, it's not   
   bad, as just for use as a cap meter, blah, just wouldn't recommend it unless   
   you stumble across a bargain.   
      
   It's not really a good design either, I think I lost it a long time ago but   
   it actually came with a spring-loaded "stick", you used that to hold a   
   button down by placing it between the handle and button. Was used to   
   "reform" capacitors, which I don't think really worked in the first place.   
      
   I mean really, even for a 80's design, they couldn't come up with some kind   
   of mechanical button lock? A stick? For a $1000 meter?   
      
   I like the LED display over LCD and have to give it credit for still working   
   being nearly 30 years old but if ask me, the $300 average asking price on   
   ebay currently is still a few bucks too high to me.   
      
   If you do buy one, make sure it has the main probe, basically a bnc/coax   
   with e-z hooks. The "right" one from Sencore is around $60.   
      
   -bruce   
   bje@ripco.com   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]


(c) 1994,  bbs@darkrealms.ca