Hi

In the case of a $200 5370, you have to wait a while to find one. When you get 
it, you likely have to do some work to get it running. At the very least you 
will need to do a cal. 

My guess is that a counter project would be very similar. There is an order and 
build process that happens every so often. Eventually you get a set of boards 
that *might* work. They still need a bit of this and that to get them running. 
Once running you need to do a cal.

The calibrated and running counter is something you can have tomorrow (more or 
less). That's very different than the kit of boards.

Bob

 
On Dec 18, 2010, at 11:07 PM, jimlux wrote:

> Bob Camp wrote:
>> Hi
>> If you are going to do a full boat implementation and work out all the 
>> isolation issues and packaging, the question becomes:
>> Will it be better bang for the buck than a ~ $200 HP 5370?
>> 
> 
> Isn't that the classic New vs Used discussion, though?  Those 5370s won't be 
> available for $200 all the time
> 
> The used equipment dealers charge more like $750-2k for that, depending if 
> it's an A or a B, or if it's calibrated, etc.  The lowest price on eBay is 
> around $700
> 
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