Hi all,
I did not see an equipment support section, and I am working at home with basically small budget and for the pleasure of the science and electronics, so I'd like to ask if anyone has a tech manual for these older equipments. I build or modify a lot of my own electronics when it's not available or otherwise too expensive for a hobby purchase.
If this is posted in the wrong place, please excuse me and mods can move or delete.
1.) Spectromagnetics NMR Gaussmeter model 5300 (Spectromagnetics - The Cyclotron Corporation) - same thing, need the whole manual and schematics on this one, and a magnetic field probe for it.
Worst case I could make a probe if I have the manual. It's much more complex than the amplifier below, and there is something wrong with it so the book would be a huge help. Otherwise, I don't think I can fix it.
The purpose of the instrument is to use with a NMR spectrometer I am working on. I already built it on my workbench, but it took up the whole bench, so now it's time rebuild the same basic circuit in a rack cabinet. I want to look at periodical or RF variations in the magnetic field. I'm sure there will be other uses for the Gaussmeter if it can be repaired.
2.) Geotech 4983 helicorder amplifier. It's just the amplifier, which I would like to repurpose.
I don't have the drum recorder, but don't really need it (wouldn't turn it down..). This is an old chart amplifier with vacuum tubes. That's no problem but I am looking for the schematic diagram or manual if anyone has it. That would save me several hours tracing it out, plus help me calibrate it.
The re-purpose of this instrument amp is to drive a direct coupled power amplifier stage running on an adjustable +/-50 to +/-200V supply. The whole instrument will be able to amplify an arbitrary waveform to a range of outputs covering as much as +/-200V and +/-1A (3A peaks). It will hopefuly give a linear current waveform or linear voltage waveform (switch selected) into a variety of nonlinear loads from 100 Ohms up. For me, it's a lot faster to modify something that is similar to what I need, than to build everything from scratch.
Thanks!