> On Aug 20, 2023, at 7:27 PM, Mike Loewen via cctalk <cctalk@classiccmp.org> 
> wrote:
> 
> On Sun, 20 Aug 2023, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
> 
>> On 8/20/23 12:43, Glen Slick via cctalk wrote:
>>> On Sun, Aug 20, 2023, 12:05 PM John H. Reinhardt via cctalk <
>>> cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
>>> 
>>>> Hello all.  I looking around for a Logic Analyzer for doing (mostly) DEC
>>>> QBus/UniBus stuff.  Being the way I am I want something with enough lines
>>>> to handle the most of the signals so I'm guessing something with roughly
>>>> 80-ish channels.  I think that lets out all/most of the USB based LA.  I've
>>>> looked around and it seems the the HP/Agilent 16700 series (16700B/16702B)
>>>> are probably what I want.  I've also seen the 1670G which also seems quite
>>>> doable.  I've seen a lot of posts at the EEVblog and it seems I missed
>>>> possibly the golden age of 16700 LA by a few years price-wise.
>> 
>> And to think that the old guys had an analogue lab scope and that was
>> about it.  Personally, I find that setting up a logic analyzer to be a
>> last resort--all those damned wires to get right, then setting up capture...
> 
>   I agree that the logic analyzer is a last resort, but when you need one 
> they're indispensable.

If it's hooked up right, a logic analyzer can also be a powerful software 
debugging tool.  The first time I saw a logic analyzer was in the hands of a 
DEC software engineer (Anton Chernoff, I think) who had one hooked up to a 
PDP-11's console buses.  It was amazing to see execution captured in real time, 
giving much more power than ODT ever had.

Meanwhile, on logic analyzers: I have a Fluke (Philips) PM3585 analyzer at 
home, unfortunately short on pods so I can use only about 32 of the 96 
channels.  It's pretty flexible, has lots of channels, and (in state-only mode 
at least) a decent amount of memory.  No plugins, just a single box.  It's not 
as well known so the price may be lower, I haven't checked.

        paul


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