I have one of these available for a few bucks, plus shipping.  Looks fine, but 
I’m not going to mess with it.

Please let me know if you are interested.  There is no front cover, no 
accessories.

Of course let me know if there’s a good place to post it.  Might be good for a 
museum ship.

Wilson

W4BOH

The second AN/USM scope is a OS-34/ USM-32, developed and made by Dumont. It 
was also sold to the civilian market as the Type 301-A. It is a very compact 
unit being 7.5 H x 5.5 W x 15 long, excluding the front cover which contains 
many accessories including a AM detector probe and  triode connected 5702 
cathode follower probe. The CRT is a 3WP1 flat faced type that was produced by 
Dumont amongst others and is notably used in the excellent Tektronix 310 and 
310A. It is around twice as sensitive as the 3RP1 used in the OS-8E/U. This 
scope was intended for specialist use in maintaining radar equipment and in 
some ways is the most interesting scope in this collection. Note; if you are 
considering one of these, know that there is no auto or free run capability so 
when using it as a regular oscilloscope, a trace will only be present when a 
signal is present (no base line) which is a bit disconcerting.

The design is unusual, for me at least. It features a fairly crude triggered 
time base that is not calibrated, despite the use of an active shunt-regulated 
power supply. The shunt regulator is also unusual, all the other scope 
regulated power supplies I have encountered are series-regulated with the 
exception of the DC heater supply in the HP 150A. (Technically, 
shunt-regulation is superior, however, it is vulnerable since if the load is 
removed, usually the shunt element over-dissipates.) The voltage reference is 
also a bit quirky, the 5651 reference tube being located in the ground end of 
the CRT divider chain providing -87V. This means that the divider chain is 
designed to run at around 2mA which is much higher than necessary than is 
necessary to properly bias the CRT. Here is my hand re-drawn time base 
schematic, I did this to help me understand it while getting it working. I 
found C507 to be leaky, a very similar fault to the one I found in the HP 150A 
time base. The waveforms and voltages shown were taken after the modification 
described further down this page.



A crude marker generator is included that blanks the beam at the marker 
intervals, however it is not crystal controlled so I do do expect any useful 
accuracy. (As received, it is actually disconnected, I expect the coupling cap 
is leaky and that was the simplest way to get the scope usable at the time…) 
The other rather interesting feature is the provision of a trigger generator 
that produces trigger signals at intervals from around 25mS to 180μS. I say 
around because that is the specification, there are repetition rate marks 
around the control but the actual repetition rate did not even come close. I 
fiddled with it until I got the end points in the ball-park however, the 
increments are still wildly off. I wonder if ageing of the pot track has 
changed the rate of the pot as well as the over-all value? The trigger 
generator puts this unit in the category sometimes referred to as a 
“synchroscope”. The idea is that the trigger generator is not only used to 
trigger the time base, but also the external circuit under examination. The 
intended purpose of this scope was for use in trouble-shooting triggered 
circuits that might be found in radar and since the unit is naval, I guess also 
sonar. I am looking forward to getting the unit operating fully and playing 
with this feature!

This scope also uses the clever unblanking bistable method that I explained in 
the Solartron CT 436 discussion. In summary, the unblanking signal (from the 
sweep gate) is ac coupled to a bistable that is riding on the CRT cathode and 
switches the CRT grid on and off in response to the leading and trailing edges 
of the sweep gate thereby obtaining proper unblanking at low sweep speeds 
without DC coupling to gate to the CRT grid.

Here it is as received from via eBay showing the glue used to hold the green 
filter that has run down over the filter over the years. The only other picture 
of an OS-34 / USM-32 I have found (at www.navy-radio.com/test.htm) shows the 
same problem. I simply removed the green filter, it could easily be replaced 
with a new one for authenticity.




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