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r/electronics • u/Spezi-Community • 20d ago
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1
I like that the connectors at the bottom 1MΩ 25 pf are in the Latin alphabet.
3 u/Such-Assignment-1529 19d ago It's a typical values and a standard BNC connectors - you can use any modern probes with is. 3 u/fried_green_baloney 19d ago edited 18d ago It's just the use of the Latin alphabet that's amusing. On a scope with e.g. English wording everywhere, the notation would be of course not remarkable at all. EDIT: In the Russian alphabet, pf would transliterate to пф -- I think. 4 u/oxpoleon 19d ago SI units are SI units. Everyone uses them (except nonscientific Americans). 2 u/arsv 19d ago edited 18d ago Soviet stuff typically had SI units written in Cyrillic, like мкФ instead of μF or МГц instead of MHz. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Soviet_%28Armenian%29_K50-6_electrolytic_capacitors.jpg (note 1984 date codes, it's not even the 60s or something) However, in some areas like test equipment, Latin script for units was quite common.
3
It's a typical values and a standard BNC connectors - you can use any modern probes with is.
3 u/fried_green_baloney 19d ago edited 18d ago It's just the use of the Latin alphabet that's amusing. On a scope with e.g. English wording everywhere, the notation would be of course not remarkable at all. EDIT: In the Russian alphabet, pf would transliterate to пф -- I think. 4 u/oxpoleon 19d ago SI units are SI units. Everyone uses them (except nonscientific Americans). 2 u/arsv 19d ago edited 18d ago Soviet stuff typically had SI units written in Cyrillic, like мкФ instead of μF or МГц instead of MHz. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Soviet_%28Armenian%29_K50-6_electrolytic_capacitors.jpg (note 1984 date codes, it's not even the 60s or something) However, in some areas like test equipment, Latin script for units was quite common.
It's just the use of the Latin alphabet that's amusing.
On a scope with e.g. English wording everywhere, the notation would be of course not remarkable at all.
EDIT: In the Russian alphabet, pf would transliterate to пф -- I think.
4 u/oxpoleon 19d ago SI units are SI units. Everyone uses them (except nonscientific Americans). 2 u/arsv 19d ago edited 18d ago Soviet stuff typically had SI units written in Cyrillic, like мкФ instead of μF or МГц instead of MHz. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Soviet_%28Armenian%29_K50-6_electrolytic_capacitors.jpg (note 1984 date codes, it's not even the 60s or something) However, in some areas like test equipment, Latin script for units was quite common.
4
SI units are SI units. Everyone uses them (except nonscientific Americans).
2 u/arsv 19d ago edited 18d ago Soviet stuff typically had SI units written in Cyrillic, like мкФ instead of μF or МГц instead of MHz. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Soviet_%28Armenian%29_K50-6_electrolytic_capacitors.jpg (note 1984 date codes, it's not even the 60s or something) However, in some areas like test equipment, Latin script for units was quite common.
2
Soviet stuff typically had SI units written in Cyrillic, like мкФ instead of μF or МГц instead of MHz.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Soviet_%28Armenian%29_K50-6_electrolytic_capacitors.jpg (note 1984 date codes, it's not even the 60s or something)
However, in some areas like test equipment, Latin script for units was quite common.
1
u/fried_green_baloney 20d ago
I like that the connectors at the bottom 1MΩ 25 pf are in the Latin alphabet.