What I was talking about, is the ASIC, not the DMM itself. AND, in the context of the fact that [today] you would just not sell enough 8.5-digit meters to justify the development of a new ASIC. I imagine that ASIC took many "spins" through the fab to get it right, and *today* that would be in the millions. Combine that with the cost to re-design this meter [the team, the time, the resources, etc.], and you would end up with a meter that was so expensive that nobody would want to buy it.
I also suspect that even more than the military, the semiconductor manufacturers will use many of the 3458A's [thousands of them for each manufacturer], and I can't imagine them investing in equipment like that unless HP/Agilent/Keysight would guarantee [in writing] long term support for their investment. The 3458A is not a DMM that you would use for casual bench use [for working on other equipment] unless what you are working on requires that kind of precision. For repair work, most people prefer a hand-held DMM or a 6.5-digit bench DMM if more precision is required. So, the user interface of the 3458A is not likely to get a "new updated look" for a long time [if ever], because the market will simply not support the development costs. Even if Keysight were to come out with a "new" 8.5-digit DMM that was just a 3458A analog board attached to new digital electronics and an upgraded touch display, it would not have any better specs over the 3458A, so many that already have a 3458A would not upgrade. In short, there is just no compelling business reason to spend a lot of money developing a new 8.5+ digit DMM, and I don't see that idea going anywhere. There may in fact BE an ongoing redevelopment effort within Keysight, but it is my opinion that the new design will never be released into production. The business executives in Keysight [who are pretty smart people], will want to see a return on investment, and there will be none of that, so why bother? I happen to own an older HP-branded 3458A, and I think it is "the bee's knees", and would not upgrade [at probably US$12K+] if a new 8.5+ digit meter came out. How about others on this list? What say you? If Keysight were to release a "new" DMM with a new beautiful interface, but with the same analog electronics as are in the 3458A, and they priced it at [say] US$12K, would you sell your 3458A on fleaBay, and then buy one of these new meters, even though the specs are exactly the same as your old meter? _______________________________________________ volt-nuts mailing list -- volt-nuts@febo.com To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/volt-nuts and follow the instructions there.