Maybe I should browse for some naked lesbians riding motorcycles while skeetshooting - see what google ads does with that.
I remember saving up my sheckels and buying an Eico VTVM kit, which I successfuly built, and it served me well. In fact, other than the old D cell battery in it that leaked, it is still fine, across the shop from me now waiting for an overhaul and a return to nostalgic service. I was into building amplifiers, and I might have been all of 12 years old. I realized the need for a power supply and was building one when my dad came along, "Whatcha doing?" Told him I was building a 300 volt power supply for my little tube amplifiers. he said, "well, can't you make it for less voltage than that?" Um, sure dad, I'll try that.
So my VTVM on the shelf, I continued to learn, and felt the need to know what all these capacitors were that I was getting. The Eico (I was an Eico guy, my electronics buddy was the Heathkit guy among us) 950 RC comparator bridge looked appealing. It had a magic eye tube so you could balance out components or just measure them. I could measure resistors with the VTVM of course, but measuring caps AND being able to test them at up to 500v was real appealing. Plus you could even measure inductors as long as you had a refernce. Those mystery cap values would soon be mine.
So I told my dad I wanted to get this thing, and his response was something I never forgot, "Son, don't waste your money, you ALREADY have a tester." Yep, to dad, test equipment was test equipment, you didn;t need two. To this day, now and then someone calls about some piece of gear they want fixed and they ask, "Don't you just hook it up to a tester?" And I think of my dad.
But eventually I won that war, and my Eico 950 was a great addition. I could determine cap values and test them for leakage, and even watch them form up on the eye tube.
I remember saving up my sheckels and buying an Eico VTVM kit, which I successfuly built, and it served me well. In fact, other than the old D cell battery in it that leaked, it is still fine, across the shop from me now waiting for an overhaul and a return to nostalgic service. I was into building amplifiers, and I might have been all of 12 years old. I realized the need for a power supply and was building one when my dad came along, "Whatcha doing?" Told him I was building a 300 volt power supply for my little tube amplifiers. he said, "well, can't you make it for less voltage than that?" Um, sure dad, I'll try that.
So my VTVM on the shelf, I continued to learn, and felt the need to know what all these capacitors were that I was getting. The Eico (I was an Eico guy, my electronics buddy was the Heathkit guy among us) 950 RC comparator bridge looked appealing. It had a magic eye tube so you could balance out components or just measure them. I could measure resistors with the VTVM of course, but measuring caps AND being able to test them at up to 500v was real appealing. Plus you could even measure inductors as long as you had a refernce. Those mystery cap values would soon be mine.
So I told my dad I wanted to get this thing, and his response was something I never forgot, "Son, don't waste your money, you ALREADY have a tester." Yep, to dad, test equipment was test equipment, you didn;t need two. To this day, now and then someone calls about some piece of gear they want fixed and they ask, "Don't you just hook it up to a tester?" And I think of my dad.
But eventually I won that war, and my Eico 950 was a great addition. I could determine cap values and test them for leakage, and even watch them form up on the eye tube.
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