As an experiment, I bought an AIMS sine-wave inverter for the 105B Quartz Oscillator. The inverter has a built-in transfer switch that is supposed to allow the load to operate from the AC line and automatically switch to battery/inverter should the AC power line fail.

In fact the thing seems to work—the output is a nice 118 VAC sine wave measuring 60.189 ± 0.003 Hz and the transfer switch is fast enough that the 105B doesn't seem to notice the change. The "AC Interruption" light doesn't light and I don't see a flicker of the 5 MHz output on my scope.

Just for the fun of it, I connected a filament transformer and ran the low voltage into my distortion analyzer. The result was about 5% distortion for the inverter and 1.5% for the AC line. This got me to wondering, we've discussed the AC power line frequency at length but not other "qualities" of that "signal.' I was surprised that the AC line had so much distortion but it's a subject I've never considered. Has anyone in this group looked at this? [Yes, this is perilously close to not being appropriate Time-Nuts discussion matter—sorry!]

Jeremy





Regards,
Jeremy


On 9/18/2016 4:33 AM, Scott McGrath wrote:
That NiCad pack is part of the power supply and as Jeremy points out is part of 
the filter system.    And so one needs to restore it as part of the instrument 
as even the 28V external power supply floats these cells and trips power 
interruption indicator if lost



Power supply is not terribly hard to fix and the small signal transistors can 
be replaced with  2N 2222,3904 and 3906'es depending on rating.  You don't even 
need a extender a Huntron tracker or similar current limited lissajous bridge 
will identify failed or leaky caps and semiconductors

Remember HP did nothing without a good engineering reason and that plate is 
there for RF shielding to prevent stray sources coupling with the outputs

If a proper rebuild is too expensive I'd suggest selling it on the well known 
auction site rather than hacking it up as 105's have been selling in the 
hundreds regardless of condition


On Sep 17, 2016, at 10:16 PM, Jeremy Nichols <jn6...@gmail.com> wrote:

How did you come up with the 33,000 uF number, Perry, and is it one big 
capacitor or lots of little ones tied together? The big cap will also filter 
out some of the remaining ripple in the power supply that may have been managed 
by the ni-cad battery.

Jeremy


On 9/17/2016 3:50 PM, Perry Sandeen via time-nuts wrote:
<snip>
  Where the nicad pack was located one can put in 33,000 uF of Nichicon 105C caps for 
$20 for a buffer hold over. <snip>
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