Wow, great links. I saw the MCTracer stuff - good stuff. I like the simplicity of Tim Williams manual tracer. Maybe that is a good place to start, just to get the feel for it.
Roughly my goals are as follows:
- make it work with an analog scope (can always use a digital scope to capture images to the computer)
- cheap and simple
- triodes, small signal pentodes and power tubes - full voltage and full current?!?!
- ability to run two tubes at once (or two halfs of a triode or two pentodes) to do a full tube comparison/match
- no need for meters, we can use our DMMs
Here is another link. Not much use, but interesting:
http://www.techlib.com/electronics/curvetrace.htmlI have been reading the following:
(1) Have a variable B+ supply. Being cheap, I will have no regulation, so have a PT with a variac behind it. Use a seperate filament transformer.
(2) Have step generator that can step through the grid voltage with some degree of accuracy
(3) Have a sawtooth generator, in sync with the steps that will cycle B+ on and off for each step
(4) Somehow feed this to the X-Y of the scope (I know this is how they do it, but not too sure)
I have no clue what to due with screen voltage though (for pentodes). I guess we need some variable way to bring down the voltage.