1310-A: Difference between revisions

From GRWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 12: Line 12:
* [[Media:GR 1310-A Oscillator 1310-0100-A 1966.pdf|General Radio 1310-A Oscillator Manual 131-0100-A 1966]]
* [[Media:GR 1310-A Oscillator 1310-0100-A 1966.pdf|General Radio 1310-A Oscillator Manual 131-0100-A 1966]]
}}
}}
The '''General Radio 1310-A Oscillator''' was introduced in 1965 Catalog S and remained available through Catalog T 1968.  
The '''General Radio 1310-A Oscillator''' was introduced in {{Catalog S}} and remained available through {{Catalog T}}.


The Type 1310-A is a RC Wien bridge oscillator driving a low distortion amplifier.  With a constant output independent of frequency but adjustable from a panel level control.  The 1310-A is a hybrid design with a nuvistor triode as part of the oscillator bridge and the amplifier using transistors. On the side of the instrument is an combination input/output synchronization jack. Although its output impedance is 600 ohms its also useful with 50 ohm applications.  
The Type 1310-A is a RC Wien bridge oscillator driving a low distortion amplifier.  With a constant output independent of frequency but adjustable from a panel level control.  The 1310-A is a hybrid design with a nuvistor triode as part of the oscillator bridge and the amplifier using transistors. On the side of the instrument is an combination input/output synchronization jack. Although its output impedance is 600 ohms its also useful with 50 ohm applications.  

Revision as of 03:34, 2 April 2024

General Radio 1310-A
oscillator
General Radio 1310-A Oscillator

Available from 1965 to 1968

Manuals
(All manuals in PDF format unless noted otherwise)

The General Radio 1310-A Oscillator was introduced in Catalog S (1965) and remained available through Catalog T (1968).

The Type 1310-A is a RC Wien bridge oscillator driving a low distortion amplifier. With a constant output independent of frequency but adjustable from a panel level control. The 1310-A is a hybrid design with a nuvistor triode as part of the oscillator bridge and the amplifier using transistors. On the side of the instrument is an combination input/output synchronization jack. Although its output impedance is 600 ohms its also useful with 50 ohm applications.

Specifications

  • Range: 2 Hz to 2 MHz in 6 decade ranges.
  • Accuracy: ±2% of reading.
  • Power Output: 160 mW into 600 Ω.
  • Voltage: Over 20 V, open circuit.
  • Distortion: <0.25%, 50 Hz to 50 kHz, with linear loads.
  • Hum: <0.02% independent of attenuator setting.

Links

Photos