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What does it take to get a 60+ year old HP counter working? - Printable Version

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What does it take to get a 60+ year old HP counter working? - BobVA - 01-22-2022 01:23 AM

SPOILER: Not much.

That's some serious iron.






RE: What does it take to get a 60+ year old HP counter working? - Dan C - 01-24-2022 06:39 PM

Wow, that was a really solid piece of equipment!
They could build great machines back in the days.

But, i'm curious, what was an counter used for?


RE: What does it take to get a 60+ year old HP counter working? - Dan C - 02-22-2022 07:14 PM

(01-24-2022 06:39 PM)Dan C Wrote:  Wow, that was a really solid piece of equipment!
They could build great machines back in the days.

But, i'm curious, what was an counter used for?

Aha! I answer myself, a counter was used for measurement of frequencies?
Is that correct? And why was that important?


RE: What does it take to get a 60+ year old HP counter working? - KeithB - 02-22-2022 07:44 PM

Because the FCC gets very persnickety if you are broadcasting at the wrong frequency.

In the age of Phase Locked loops, all the timing in an instrument is based on one clock.

Modern counters have 10-12 digits of accuracy.