hello chuck, thank you for your mail - i went right into the shop for those 0,8 fuses. the thing works properly (on the quartz for the time being), the cesium has to be treated as the clock has been in a warehouse for years not being used. i have to restore the vacuum first and i'm looking for the device to do that. i believe it's the little hp degausser. sometimes one comes up on ebay.
your'e still on my list to nag about the oscilloquartz 3210 thats in your posession. if i can't tempt you moneywise, perhaps you might be interested in a swap: i have a oscilloquartz/sercel eudics 3200 digital cesium frequency standard with 3 manuals (on in english) and software. maybe youre interested... here's some introduction on what i do with the cesium equipment: Sebastian Stolp. A collection of high precision clocks I started this collection in the late 1990s with a passion for the first electronic clocks from Patek Philippe in scientific equipment 19 racks and table cases. Equipment like this at the time provided exact time for e.g. banks, insurance companies or train stations and airports worldwide. These clocks are a breed apart from what the middle-of-the-road watch- or clock collector would consider, or manage to get hold of. They were already old-tech by the time cheap radio controlled devices were mass- produced that could easily outperform the pateks on every level of precision and synchronisation. These early electronic Patek clocks are the founding part of the collection, that has expanded since. Today, the collection reaches into the field of rubidium- and cesium frequency standards and clocks, such as Hewlett Packard early rubidiums and cesiums, the HP 5065a, and the HP 5061A/B As it is a swiss collection it will also focus on swiss cesium frequency standards from oscilloquartz, former Ebauches, Neuchatel. this includes early models like the OSA 3200 and the OSA 3210, but also quartz standards (OSA 2200), because they played a important role in meeting the synchronisation requirements of the upcoming telecom industry of the early 1980ties. best regards, sebastian > --- Ursprüngliche Nachricht --- > Von: "Chuck Norton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > An: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement" > <time-nuts@febo.com> > Betreff: Re: [time-nuts] 5061a tech question > Datum: Tue, 31 Jan 2006 15:47:46 -0700 > > Hi Sebastian: > The ones made in the eighties used a 0.8 amp fuse for the 230 volt > setting. > I know Manuals Plus has a web site and carry a lot of manuals. Don't know > if > they have this one or not. To get the most accurate manual, you should > look > look for one that covers the first 4 digits of your units serial numbers. > This is called the series number. All HP manuals have this listed on the > inside, usually on the first or second page. If you get a manual that > covers > a higher series than yours, it will have backdating information in it. If > you get one lower, it can be quite a bit different from the one you have. > They made a LOT of revisions on these and quite a few different manuals. > > Chuck > > > > _______________________________________________ > time-nuts mailing list > time-nuts@febo.com > https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts > -- DSL-Aktion wegen großer Nachfrage bis 28.2.2006 verlängert: GMX DSL-Flatrate 1 Jahr kostenlos* http://www.gmx.net/de/go/dsl _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list time-nuts@febo.com https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts