New scopes are expensive, used Teks in good working order are relatively
cheap and still offer excellent performance. There's millions of them out
there and parts units can still be found. If you're a business with budget
to burn then yes, buy a fancy new scope, but if you're a hobbyist on a
budget, you can't beat an old Tek.
Ante up and buy a brand new scope. Or a used refurbed late model in
support one from a real supply house with a cal cert.
The old Teks are a bargain until the first unobtainable part fails.
The problem is the same parts fail and therefore the supplies are
exhausted. You wind up swapping out parts from a scope junkpile of
carcasses you can't bear to chuck out since they are mostly good but
one tiny weensy thing-okay, the jug isn't so tiny-and there are no
more.
From a USER standpoint the best scopes ever made were the last analog
Teks-22xx and 24xx B models with cursors, soft knobs, and "all mod
cons" and a real electrostatically deflected CRT. From a repair
standpoint they are a disaster. (There were also the aborted fetus TAS
models which are dogshit even when working.)
The best analog scope tech TODAY, is far and away Iwatsu with their
converter tube which is a small CRT with a CCD sensor in the end
instead of phosphor screen. Their scopes are well made but the user
interface is not as good as classic Teks.
New analog scope choices today come down to Iwatsu, Hameg, maybe
Hitachi. Sencore still makes their overpriced shitbox and cheapo third
tier models are available too.