Another ebay score.
Dave tears down a HP4263A LCR Meter.
How an LCR Meter works: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fs2MfTW4o_Q
Forum: http://www.eevblog.com/forum/blog/eevblog-757-hp4263a-lcr-meter-teardown/'>http://www.eevblog.com/forum/blog/eevblog-757-hp4263a-lcr-meter-teardown/
4263A Datasheet:
http://www.testequipmenthq.com/datasheets/Agilent-4263A-Datasheet.pdf
4263A User Manual:
http://literature.cdn.keysight.com/litweb/pdf/04263-90001.pdf?id=722686
4263B service manual: http://www.doe.carleton.ca/~nagui/labequip/lcr/4263B_Service%20Manual.pdf
X28C64 EEPROM: http://pdf.datasheetcatalog.com/datasheets/120/291528_DS.pdf
82C54 Programmable Interval Timer http://www.intersil.com/content/dam/Intersil/documents/82c5/82c54.pdf
Precision DiFET opamp
OPA627 http://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/opa627.pdf
List of Keysight part numbers: http://literature.cdn.keysight.com/litweb/pdf/5989-5950EN.pdf
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Hi welcome to Teardown Tuesday it's another eBay score that I've got. This is a HP Yes, none of this agent or keysight rubbish. 42 63 a LCR meter and it's an oldie, but a goodie dates from about 1990 or thereabout. so jeez, it's amazing to think 1990 is like 25 years old.

But anyway, it's an oldie, a bit of goody bench LCR meter and I Rather like these things, the user interface is a little bit clunky as we will see later, but I like the fact that they're nice and small and compact. It is not as wide as a big you know 19-inch rack mount unit. It's not that deep. it only weighs out 4.4 kilos.

so it's relatively cheap to get one of these shipped. and I picked up this for I saw it on there for 200 us. buy it now and I offered lower than that and it was accepted and postage was reasonable and so it came in pretty good. So for a it's a point one percent class LCR meter I can do more than LCN are kind of like measure transformer parameters, open, short compensation, do all sorts of fantastic stuff.

So I thought we'd take a look inside I Don't think I've ever taken the hood off one of these puppies before, so let's check it out. Now, don't confuse this with the 4260 3b model. this is the IE model which is the older one with the single line LCD if you can pick up the newer B model for a decent price, even better. but I think they go for a lot more cuz they're you know they were Keysight sorry Agilent Bloody branded and they went for a lot longer.

This one was discontinued I'm not actually sure let's have a look, but yeah, they're basically equivalent. The B has a new dual line LCD a bit of dust inside this puppy, which is quite unusual because these things don't have a fan. Another thing I like about them, they're completely passive. Look at that.

a nice linear transform in the thing and beautiful. Let's check it out and wouldn't you know it? I'm out of air duster spray to clean this thing up. Damn it so sorry. you get the you get the grotty unit.

So yeah, rather surprised at the amount of dust in here. There's a noce fan in it so you know how does it? I mean it's got vent holes? maybe it was sitting in Iraq something like that. and yeah, you can get that rack extensions for these that plug in the side so you can plug them into 19-inch racks and maybe it was getting air flow from the rest of the system or something like that coming through the vent holes on the side over here. anyway.

um, it looks very neat and tidy. I Like it. As I said, we've got a big thumping that linear transformer here we've got. Interestingly, there's our diode bridge.

Okay, but we've got this little hybrid board with surface mount on the bottom and - probably linear regulators on the top there with little pissant heat sinks on them, so that's rather rather interesting. Got a big big bridge rectifier there and we're our two big cut filter caps they're Nippon chemi Cons: no worries whatsoever 105 degrees C rate and thank you very much And there's our our front panel terminals. They got little common-mode toroids on them just to keep the crap out and nice board to board B and C's for those. Very nice one.
Looks like we've got some input protection with the diodes there and because these things you don't want to go apply in DC voltage and it probably tells you that there it is discharged test device before connecting. if you hook up a big thump and electrolytic capacitor charged up to it or I can ruin your day. Interestingly they've got a DC to DC converter in here. They've got all the trouble for this nice linear power supply arrangement.

Then they've got this little DC to DC converter brick and that's powering something over here. So I'm not sure. Oh yeah, in downing this I'm not sure what the deal is there. Hmm.

this top board here. obviously the processor interface this puppy looks interesting. Are this dusters horrible? Take a good look at that in a minute. it's the GPIB it's driving the GPIB so that would be our GPIB chipset up there and that's probably our process.

We'll take a look at that and there's the money shot for you. 68,000 fanboys obviously the main processor there and it's the HC version. Awesome! And we got ourselves an NEC Super Cup point 2. 2.

Farad's there. Five point, Five volts, no rechargeable or our primary Lithium battery to leak in this thing. By the looks of it. Excellent.

I Love Super Caps and none of this modern flash rubbish. We go on old schools I call X28 C64 a squared prom so that I hold all your non-volatile settings and then we've got ourselves a AMD EEPROM here for the main program: 1 Meg it's a decent size eeep. ROM Let me tell you, and there we go: 1992 vintage, but the main processor here is 50 second week 94. So this thing was built in 1995 and check this out.

Very interesting package. Look at this: I've rarely seen something like that. It's obviously some sort of art National Semiconductor custom ASIC or a gate array or something like that. so if anyone's got any info on that, please leave it in.

The comments of that is fascinating and of course it's all tied in to the process. You can see all the traces and everything else. So Wow Some sort of. It's almost like some sort of system glue logic.

You know. Tying that look, it's tied up here, maybe into maybe it's do some. It's doing some memory as well and things like that. So so it's almost like some sort of, you know, glue logic that you could have done in as you know, a CP or D or a little FPGA or something.

But yeah, so that makes me suspect that's some sort of custom gate array from National semiconductor and it wouldn't surprise me in the least if they upgraded this when they went to the B model with the dual line display because this thing probably went obsolete by you know, like the end of the 90s. I'll show you the rear panel as well. Mains selection here so you know no worries with buying these internationally at all. And we've got external DC bias voltage, external trigger the handle in handler interface These things are important because LCR meters like this are designed for like you know, automated system production testing and stuff like that.
So you'd have this digital handle er interface which can control you know, limit switches and you know all sorts of a bed of nails type stuff for your product under test and all controlled via our GPIB of course and made in Japan All the best stuffs made in Japan And for those wondering why it's made in Japan because that's a bit unusual for HP gear, isn't it? Well, not so much because this explains everything. Why HP Yokogawa HP It's this is actually our design and probably manufactured by Yokogawa for HP They had a partnership for lots of high-end test instruments and things like that. Serious dust under here, that's for sure I Really need to clean this sucker out I Might have to head to JK and get an emergency can of compressed air to clean this out. anyway.

Interesting, We've got ourselves a little lie shield there that's trying to do some RF shielding for this vertical board here which by the looks of the big capacitors on there and the resistors and there's some surface mount stuff on the other side. I reckon that is the device under test range resistor select board because if you don't know how these LCR meters work well I've done a video on that way back in the day which o link in here. Check it out if you haven't seen it and the way these things work is that they put a resistor in series with the device under test and that's there. Range resistant which we'll see later.

We can actually select that on the front panel and with that resistor in series of course you measure. You can measure the voltage and the current and hence the current going through the resistor and you can also measure the voltage of the device under test and from those from the voltage and current through the device under test and the phase. you can actually calculate every parameter of the device under test: inductance, capacitance, reactant, series, resistance, and dissipation factor, quality factor, you name it. You can calculate all this stuff and in the video here I've gone through and showed you the formulas that actually makes that happen Now unfortunately I can't bend that board back because I'll break it.

but aha, look at all these precision e looking resistors on here plus a couple of little liars Oh chips which are probably maxes to choose the range on there. So yeah, I reckon that's got to be the range resistor select board now. I Couldn't find a service manual for this forty to sixty three AE model, but I did find the service manual for the B model, which by the way looks like it came out in about two thousand. So about ten years after they originally did the A model and by the way, looking at the block diagram, it looks like it may sort of have the main chip over here, but like a similar layout, but it could have changed anyway.
We have the overall theory of operation and it's exactly as I explained before. I've showed it in the other video but yeah, we've got a the device under test and a range resistor and it just measures the voltage and the currents going through the device and from that voltage, current ratio, measurement principle, you get the impedance and from that there we go. It only focuses on the impedance, the other parameters LCR and every quality factor participation. Everything else is derived mathematically from the measured impedance values, so it's rather quite simple.

We've got a signal source here selectable test frequency hundred Hertz, 121 k10 k and hundred k. In this case, we've got our device under test. so they're measuring the differential voltage across that here and then they're measuring the current through the device with a range resistor here which they can select in. it's anywhere from like 1 ohm up to 10 Meg or something like that as we'll see later in the software and they just feed that multiplex that into an ADC and Bob's your uncle.

you can calculate anything. Very simple technique, but there's a bit of math and filner in everything else which goes behind it. And here is more of the practical implementation how they do it here. We've got the four terminals on the front here so they do why Kelvin connection right at the device under test for compensate for you Tesla's We've got our signal source here which generates from our current terminal and then we can read that off and then they can just multiplex that and whack it into an ADC and there's your range resistor on the low inside there to easy and we've got ourselves a Che Ches I If I'm pronouncing that correctly, I'm sure I'm not once again Jeff in Japan because it's a Yokogawa product so you know no surprises for guessing that they're using Japanese chips in it.

It's rather obscure. a K' 92018 - a Vp can't really find a datasheet for it. it's you know you get all the false leads on the on the merchants websites and stuff like that. but of course based on you know it's an analogue part because IE you've got these electrolytic caps around it.

There's no like big digital stuff going into it. and look, they've got some resistors around here and it just looks like an analogue and log e type chip. And what's it going to be in this thing? Well, we need that analog to digital converter don't we? So I'm pretty darn sure that is our analog to digital converter. so I'm not sure what type it is.

it's probably some sort of, you know, maybe a dual slope converter or something. Not entirely sure. But anyway, definitely analog to digital converter. And we've got ourselves a rather crude duck in here as well the Oh 802 And that is for setting your output signal level because today here's your output block diagram.
We have our reference oscillator here. that's our DAC there that we just saw that we've got ourselves a low-pass filter and then the DC bias our source. You can turn that off, they just some that in and as we saw before, you got an external connector on the back if you want to feed in your own DC bias and a buffer and then the source resistor. that's not to be confused with the range resistor.

so that's the source resistor driving your device under test because as you can see, not only can you set the frequency here from 100 Hertz up to 100 K but you can also set the voltage level as well. And for voltage dependent devices, that can be a big deal. So you know this has that fixed steps built-in or you can actually feed in your own Externally got ourselves an inter cell while 82 C-54 there that's a programmable timer counter chip and that puppy next door is just a very small lower pal there. so this just got some glue logic associated with that timer counter.

I'm not sure why they bothered because the borders, you know, chock-a-block with all this other discrete logic stuff and down on the front end here. no surprises for finding precision Op amps in this case, beurre Brown There though all the Ducks guts back in the day I'm OPI Six to seven there are precision dye FET hard on this buy fit rubbish. die fat Op amps. oh my God.

ourselves. Another regulator board down in there by the looks of it. But yeah, it is actually a different SMD layout on the back to this one we saw over here. So I'm not sure what the deal is there now.

I'm actually doubting that it's a regulator board I Think it could be something else. Actually, if you give it a moment's thought, you can probably figure out what this board does their power transistors and I'll tell you why. Well got ourselves the DAC here, right? That DAC as we saw on the modular block diagram, the DAC of course drives the signal level. We've got some filtering around here probably and then we've got the output buffer which has to drive today this wire here, which is our positive high current output there.

There it is, so that is obviously our output driver board with a couple of power transistors on there. So some things like that actually become very obvious when you just you know, follow the path and just put on your thinking cap for few seconds and try and figure it out. So yeah, I'd bet my bottom dollar that's a buffer amplifier board. And as I said, I'm willing to bet that's our range resistor board there, or what they call the transducer there.

So I reckon that's probably if they're doing some maxing in there and of course would contain the range resistors. It's just curiously placed because it's on the system diagram. Of course it's on the low side. So here's our low side over here.
and well, it's going in over here. So hmm. a few doubts, but it just seems to match. Just like the physical, you know, physical arrangement of what's on there and stuff like that, but interesting.

Um, so yeah, we do not have the schematics for this thing that I could immediately find, but if you do have them, please link them in and then I will put. always always put The link in down the bottom for those who want to play along at home with the service manual. Always fun and on the mains side of things here, it's all very neat and tidy. It's got the requisite input protection and all the jazz.

I like it. apart from the fact that what wouldn't cut the mustard these days, all the exposed mains wiring on the back of the voltage selection switch down in there. So yeah, that's not too great, but still very neat and tidy. So that's a look inside so I might now just pair it up and have a little play around with it.

Now the 42 63 be service manual that I got. Sadly, it doesn't have any schematics in it. it's got the block diagrams, the area of operation, parts list, all that sort of jazz. but as he is quite common yet no schematic, she only got that in like June like the printed out version possibly and nobody's scanned it in.

So let's power this puppy up and it wasn't like it was just sold as kind of like as is. So I like the 14 segment display on these things. Fantastic. there we go.

42 63 I Oh What? What was that? Hang on, let's put it up. Yeah they got the 14 segment starburst display and Rev 2.00 option double o1 a short option double O one is at my be like external DC bias or something like that which in a lot of our gear like this you might pay extra for, especially in like the old fluke Phillips LCR meters I think the DC bias was like an optional extra. Now the only issue with this thing, it seems to be you know, seems to be doing the business. Of course we're going to get overflow and you know every thing else because we've got nothing hooked up to all the sensors not hooked up.

So basically what we do, these are the current drive lines which actually drive the current through the device. and then of course you've got your sense terminal. So it's a four terminal Kelvin measurement system. Now of course you can get really expensive um, add-on pods which actually plug directly onto the front and then they've got the traditional two terminals for your device under test.

I don't have one of those? I might actually make one up. but in the meantime I've just made up a nice little adapter with four B and C's and I've just got the sense terminal joined inside there. So now we can just measure two terminal devices easy. And as you can see, the B and C's are a bit crusty on this thing could actually replace them.

We could try and clean them up I might do that later, but yeah they haven't. They have seen better days, but the actual internal contact is still okay. So here we go. We're just measuring a point one mic cap here in series mode and here's the thing I don't like about this series of LCR meters is that the user interface is a yeah it's a bit Dicky It's a bit difficult to use.
It's not the easiest thing to drive, you really have to get used to it. but anyway, we've got all the different measurement parameters and the way you do it is a bit weird. You go into measurement parameters and you think that you'd be able to select those with you up down arrows but that actually changes your main meant. like your main menu options.

see six of eight here. So on the first we can measure impedance. So Zed is impedance. so you can get impedance and that is like phase angle.

So if we actually chose that, we could actually measure the impedance of our copper plus the phase angle. So we would actually go in there and you see it's change. From serious capacitance to displaying the impedance at that particular frequency, we've got a hundred Hertz. We can just choose the different frequencies we want here.

so let's just leave it at 100 Hertz and our drive level 50 millivolts. That's going to be fine. That's not going to the signal. The the voltage dependency of this cap is not going to be.

It's not gonna matter much if at all. No, it's changing bugger-all there at 1 volts. There we go. it's changed a little bit down there, but we'll just leave it on 50 millivolts.

And of course, you can see that we've got negative 90 degrees there because it's almost an ideal capacitor. Well, it's not a bad Cap, it's doing all right. minus 90 degrees as your basic theory would suggest. And of course, if we put an inductor in there today, the voltage is going to lead instead of lag a lot like we got on the capacitor.

Yeah, just like the theory, it works. So yes, rather unusual interface. They go your measurement parameter like this and then we can. and of course we can get the resistance as well.

And then for all you admittance fanboys out there, yes, you can measure the admittance with your phase angle. and then you can measure your conductance with your susceptance. And then you've got your parallel capacitance with your dissipation factor as your secondary measurement. So basically what we're seeing is primary measurement, secondary display.

and then you can get your parallel capacitance with your quality factor if you want or whatever. and then you can get serious capacitance just like it. We'll see in a minute on the Agilent handheld meter and once again so series parallel with quality or dissipation factor and then inductance parallel of course with our quality or dissipation factor and then series inductance and then we can get with the DC resistance as well. And then we can get into transformer type stuff and the impedance as we saw lots of measurement functions on this thing.
it's you're really quite nice. So there we go if we measure the series capacitance of that very small dissipation factor 1/2 Abi's Dick there or well I don't know all B's dicks is it. And we can set like we can do averages and things like that that is actually 10 averages at the moment. This is actually a very fast, a very fast mediation like the update speed is actually quite quick because it's a system meter so it's designed for quick production measurement and things like that.

And then you've got a comparative stuff we can. You can set up so you know component been in and things like that and you've got your buyers set up. You can do a reference offset if you want. So like a delta you can.

Yeah, there it is. They've got like a dildo reference and you can actually choose which parameter you want a delta so you can choose that CS so we can actually dealt her out that one that we just did. So it's a rather convoluted system to actually do this, but we can go in there and then we can go on up. No, my gifted did.

I Yep, Screwed the pooch. It's a really annoying user interface you've got. You know, like if you don't use it for a while, you will certainly forget how to use the damn thing. So let's see if I got it this time reference and go in there and then we can choose there we go from off Delta So we're going to press mode again to go over to Delta and then we press ENTER and Tada.

There we go. We've now got Delta series capacitance. So actually why I didn't cancel that out and is now showing 0 I'm not sure it should have. Hmm, so it looks like it can't take the delta from the component under test.

or maybe it can. but anyway, in this case it looks like I've got to actually daughter out. Let's say we can Delta route 10 in there. so let's do that and no, doesn't like that at all.

Oops. Anyway, these I think you'd get the idea. These things are a pain in the ass to drive if you have an RTF M'd Okay so we're getting a hundred point two six Nano Farad's at 100 Hertz so let's try that on our handheld meter. There we go, that's not too shabby.

100 point 2 2 here. Once again, we're in series mode. They're at a hundred Hertz so all the same measurement parameters the the actual signal test level isn't going to really make a difference here. So there we go.

It's pretty done. Close to spot-on This is a is this is one of the best handheld LCR meters you can get in my opinion. The you 17:33 see it's a bit pricey. I know you can get like those cheap ones on eBay for like you know 80 bucks these days and they're pretty good.

but yeah if you can afford it, this one's a pretty decent meter. but this one as I said like 0.1% class instrument and they're actually the the accuracy specs of these are actually quite complicated. it's it's not just you know a simple point one percent. they got like a whole chart and everything for it.
but as you can see it's some pretty much bang on after 20 years. Awesome! And you can set up other things like our cable compensation you can do open short I don't think, don't know if this does open short load compensation I think the B model does? aren't going to what those is I might have done that in a previous video but yeah you know and you can set up triggering all that sort of stuff for all the automated handling interface as we saw on the back and you can do all sorts of weird and wonderful things. There's lots of stuff in there that I haven't in the setup which I haven't actually shown so but it's a very powerful versatile bench LCR meter. So there you go.

That's the HP 40 to 60 3i and I think it still pretty much holds its own today. you know, point one percent class with all the capability. Yeah the user interface is a little bit annoying, but you know if you can pick up one of these like I did for under two hundred US bucks? and I think you know that's pretty much a bargain, especially if you can get the newer B model. It's just got the nicer dual line matrix screen and things like that.

but I believe it's almost identical functionality. but even for a 20 year old instrument, it's really quite nice. And I like the form factor too. it's you.

It doesn't take up a huge amount of space on your bench. it might be a bit bigger than some modern LCR metres might be a bit deeper or something like that, but you know I think it does pretty well. It's a nice compact instrument and check them out on eBay if you can score one. So there you go, there's another quick teardown of another.

eBay Score! Hope you liked it. If you did, please give it a big thumbs up. And as always I'll link to data sheets and things down below and forum comments. Catch you next time you.


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By YTB

18 thoughts on “Eevblog #757 – hp4263a lcr meter teardown”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Ed Cammarata says:

    I have PC boards from a 4262A the test pins appear
    To be gold, does anyone know?

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Kevin Hayden says:

    Hi Dave… Did you ever hear of a Jinko 2616c lcr meter?

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars A B says:

    Common tell us the truth how much you paid for it

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars A B says:

    sorry to hear eevblog is down due to the fires in the server…I've come across a lot of helpful folks there.
    wow below $200, have you seen the prices now? Option 001 is mainly the transformer measurement…etc. under measurement mode you would see 8 pages instead of 6 pgs when you have option 001..
    Just got mine, about $300. When I leave it trigger internal which is the same as auto numbers jump around too much and all measurement are less than what is marked on the caps. wondering why it's like that. I will take any input please. thanks

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Llion Stephen says:

    What is the difference of LCR meter reading with open correction vs. open AND short corrections?

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars aaron peterson says:

    Going for $1k now, b model is $1.5k. what's the 0.1% under $200 alternative now?

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars DontJabMeBro says:

    Replace the 2 large caps ASAP

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Sam Calloway says:

    great video.  how about reviewing a Sencore LC 53 LCR meter?

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Daveyk021 says:

    Didn’t show if the “A” did ESR.

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars huy nguyentuan says:

    Excellent tutorial, Sir!

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars alles klar klaus says:

    currently only one of these on ebay: 1200 euros – buy now… (in germany) australia seems to be really cheap on professionell gear 😀

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars gmcjetpilot says:

    EEV blog: What LCR meter, bench or handheld? The Agilent you have is about $400, used classic bench models under $200 on up. No-name brand $80….Thoughts. I have a bunch of great older HP test gear, but those SPECIAL components scare me. If they go you are going to have a hard time finding a replacement.

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars xchying says:

    for your cable did you just short Lpot with Lcur or Lpot with Hpot?

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Erik Lextro says:

    Famtastic teardown; Hello Dave, I have problems to add. Of all the characters you are in diplay in total? ; 40×2?

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Hola! Doriphor says:

    1820-1741 seems to be an arithmetic cpu, from what I read they used them in HP branded calculators as well (21, 22, 25, 25C, 29C).

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Benjamin Esposti says:

    Pick one of those up for under 200 dollars my ass! These things are expensive, even used. Oh wait!
    "Google is compensated by these merchants. Payment is one of several factors used to rank these results."
    FUCK YOU GOOGLE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars douro20 says:

    One of the nicest LCR meters I've ever seen is an ESI Videobridge.  It has a monochrome CRT display and has functions you don't seen even on more modern units. It will do all the basic things a regular LCR meter will do, plus perform ESR testing, data logging, and analysis of circuit impedance along three thousand frequency points between 20Hz and 20kHz. It can even be configured for parallel measurement.

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Antenna Brain says:

    you need an A Brain for that

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