Hello Frank,

Thank you for your valuable input. From your comments, I can see why the prior 
owner decided to put it on the auction block. This 3458A came from a company in 
Fairbanks, AK. Pipeline miniatous, I think, as they had a bunch of SCADA stuff 
along with this DMM. They probably decided to replace it rather than repairing 
it. I'm guessing.

There is a list member who has graciously offered to upgrade and calibrate the 
unit for me. That is a very kind gesture that I very much appreciate. If I had 
to send it back to KS for repairs, that would be out of the question as I just 
don't have that kind of disposable income lying around.

I've removed the covers and see that it has options 001 and 002 installed. The 
date codes on the Dallas chips are 1336D. I'm guessing that's the 
manufacturer's date of the 36'th week in 2013. I have no idea what the "D" 
stands for. There's a Keysight sticker on the back that shows they last had 
hands-on in Sept. 2018.

Thanks again for your input.

Dave

-----Original Message-----
From: volt-nuts <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Frank Stellmach
Sent: Wednesday, April 22, 2020 2:16 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [volt-nuts] Keysight 3458A

Hello Dave,

At first, this error 110 is probably caused by a hardware error. The full error 
message, if you scroll right might read: 110 "Calibration Required -- ACAL".
On eevblog, we had a 3458A with exactly this message, which was caused by a 
faulty OpAmp in the input MUX, which was successfully repaired, with remote 
failure tracing.

So I doubt that a CAL is required.

Memory errors concerning the three nvSRAMs usually create different messages, I 
think it's # 212 or alike.

Therefore, please make a complete self test with the front panel TEST function, 
and report back, which additional errors show up.

Your serial number relates to a basic instrument from around 1995, which may 
have been refurbished, at least the front panel in the last 5 years.

The high calibration count denotes that it still has the old processor board 
with 6 EPROMs.
Probably it has old nvSRAM, with nearly exhausted batteries.
Both you can easily see if you open the upper case lid and read the date codes 
of the 3 DALLAS RAMs. Please report back.

I can't recommend at all to 'simply' let KS calibrate your instrument, for 
several reasons.

If the DALLAS RAMs are affected, they will replace the A5 µP board for 1-2k$.
You could instead save the CAL RAM and exchange the RAMs on your own for much 
less money, even if you'd have to buy an appropriate programmer.

If there's a HW error on the analogue board, KS will as well exchange the whole 
board for 2-3k$, which you might repair yourself instead.

Now, I just want to wish you a successful knee surgery, and then discussing 
your case soon.

Frank



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