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|    rec.audio.tubes    |    Tube-based amplifiers... that go to 11    |    52,877 messages    |
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|    Message 51,900 of 52,877    |
|    ohger1s@aol.com to Bruce Esquibel    |
|    Re: Sencore LC53 VS Sprague TelOhmike 6A    |
|    20 Oct 12 12:25:59    |
      On Saturday, October 20, 2012 9:46:01 AM UTC-4, Bruce Esquibel wrote:              > 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 bought mine new in 1985, and I thought then and still believe today that it       was a pretty good value. At the time, I was actually looking for a good       Sprague TelOhmike before deciding to buy the LC75. Back then, there was no       internet, so finding one (       in any kind of shape) was a matter of luck. Today you can search and have it       in a couple days.               Sony TVs of the 70s and 80s would have a dozen bad electrolytics at one shot,       and the LC75 cut down the time to go through these considerably. The great       thing about the LC75 is that it not only accurately read ESR, but by running       the rated voltage        through them and then remeasuring the cap, you'd see a lot of caps drop in       value by a third or more, where the ESR actually improved. This alone caught       a lot of caps that an ESR meter alone would miss. Of course, the ringer and       inductance readings were        handy as well.                     > 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 was never crazy about reforming caps and only did so in an emergency, but       that spring loaded stick was probably an afterthought after the unit was ready       for production. It did cost me once though. Trying to save a bit more time,       I had the stick hold        down the ESR button (defeating the discharge feature), and was running through       a bunch of caps, when one delivered a nice whack to the Z meter. It suddenly       read zero ESR for everything. Fortunately, Sencore shipped the meter with a       full schematic. I        don't remember what IC it was exactly, but it was some sort of an off the       shelf 14 pin gate. Other than that mishap, and having to clean the BNC       connector where the fuse goes periodically, it's been rock solid and trouble       free, and it's been in daily        use from new.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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