That's a great tip! This is *exactly* the kind of input I'm looking for!
To be honest I have vacillated between calling the repurposed room an electronics lab, project workspace, or mental health spa/sanatorium . :0)
Of course I'd like to make my electricity hero (Nikola Tesla) proud, but as always if I really go all out on the workspace the money will be stolen from the amp project(s). Then again, insufficient lab equipment = I go blind to what's going in the circuit under scrutiny way before I can 'grok' who is the victim vs. who is the perpetrator of whatever is missing the mark...
Ergo, my gut says invest in the lab 'til it hurts, and then the amp projects will be ground out, no problem, in a righteous audiophile mortar & pestle. ;0) I *do* know that the military gave me some truly amazing equipment (far up into the GHZ range) in order to test/fix the hearing of the threat warning systems...and this lession was not lost on yours truly. (Rock-solid, proved itself to be something I could trust no matter how counterintuitive the path it was leading me down. (!)
Old Nik may yawn at the voltages & currents I'll be working on, but I do hope to make the folks reading this proud.
Come on now, keep those cards & letters coming! Be thinking about the test equipment you have...and if you had to do it over, what would you replace it with?
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1) Sometimes you're helping a neighbor get their rusted steed through one more safety inspection, and he's running the car on a bicycle budget...so of course you end up at the Tool Circus (aka Harbor Freight) in order to squeak by. (Assuming Advance Auto didn't have the freebie loaner that fit. Hey, I'm no snob, been there/done that. :0) ...But thankfully, not THIS time -- I've been saving up for this, no melting of credit cards in the offing. (Whew)
2) Then there's buying new equipment that fits into your modest budget -- thinking of the affordable WooHang stuff at the affordable end of the ebay o-scope search. (But instead of *buying* stuff in this category, I'd rather *invest* in carefully chosen stuff from category #3 below.)
3) Then there's buying the previously-enjoyed 'no-kidding' commercial test equipment for a bit more money. You may have to renew caps & stuff, but once you're finished you've got something that will give you a repeatable measurement + a lot less head scratching on any given day. (This is where I consider the Tek 465/475 to fit.)
4) Finally, there's the old purpose-built mil-spec test gear. Performance/price vs. price/performance when it was originally built, can be pure heaven to use in anger...but if/when it goes bad the repair parts were always low-volume bits...and now made of unobtanium.
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Again, thanks for the tip on the Starboard! I gotta do everything, so whether it's equipment or the workbench to put it on, I wanna hear what your Taj Mahal troubleshooting/analysis analog test equipment setup would be. (And know that the lighting will be set up to be at the "Unfair Advantage" level...I'm not getting any younger, and if I have to cheat in order to win -- so be it! :0)
Thanks for your time & attention to this matter --