On 2015-Aug-19, at 3:58 PM, William Donzelli wrote:
> Yes, let the guys keep selling the higher demand documents - HP, Tek,
> Heathkit. Nearly all of those are super common anyway
> . . . 
> In fact, due to your time constraints, I would not bother with the HP,
> Tek, or Heathkit manuals at all
> . . . 

Not to disagree or contradict you, but I have to mention what may be an 
exception to that in the case of one HP instrument:

I have an HP 5480A "Digital Signal Analyser" from ca. 1968.

This instrument might be the first DSO (Digital Sampling Oscilloscope), 
although as intended it's a little more more than a DSO in that it does 
averaging over repetitions of the signal to take out noise. It also has a 
couple of other modes to collect and plot frequency histograms and such. It's 
limited to 50KHz bandwidth given it's era, but it comprises input amps, ADC, 
1K*24bits of core memory, ALU, a couple of DACs, CRT display, timebase, and a 
hardwired control system.

It's an unusual and interesting instrument for it's time and I've kept it 
around (I acquired it 12 years ago) as another early example of the transition 
from the analog world to the digital world.
It would have been phenomenally expensive in its day, and targeted at a limited 
and specialised market, so I doubt the production was very high.

The operating manual has turned up on the web recently (hparchive.com, I 
couldn't find anything when I first acquired it), which has been most useful to 
just figuring out what it does and how to use it.

It seems to have some intermittent fault in the acquisition/capture control 
however. I've reverse engineered maybe a third of it, but the remainder is 
still a large number of SSI TTL ICs and a whack of wiring, and I'd be happy to 
see a service manual show up instead of doing the remaining two thirds.

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