1604-B: Difference between revisions

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|manuals=
|manuals=
* [[Media:GR 1604-B Impedance Comparison Bridge 790-B 1956.pdf|General Radio 1604-B Impedance Comparison Bridge 790-B 1956]]
* [[Media:GR 1604-B Impedance Comparison Bridge 790-B 1956.pdf|General Radio 1604-B Impedance Comparison Bridge 790-B 1956]]
{{Catalog History}}
* [[Media:GRwiki Catalog N OCR 1954.pdf|N (1954)]], p.93
* [[Media:GRwiki Catalog O OCR 1956.pdf|O (1956)]], p.31
}}
}}
The '''General Radio 1604-B Comparison Bridge''' was introduced in 1954 Catalog N and remained available through Catalog O 1956.  
The '''General Radio 1604-B Comparison Bridge''' was introduced in 1954 Catalog N and remained available through Catalog O 1956.  

Revision as of 03:41, 29 March 2024

General Radio 1604-B
comparison bridge
General Radio 1604-B Comparison Bridge

Available from 1954 to 1956

Manuals
Catalog History
 Document Year Page
Catalog N 1954 93
Catalog O 1956 31
(All manuals in PDF format unless noted otherwise)

The General Radio 1604-B Comparison Bridge was introduced in 1954 Catalog N and remained available through Catalog O 1956.

The General Radio 1604-B Comparison Bridge was introduced in 1954 Catalog N and remained available through Catalog O 1956. The Type 1604-B was designed for sorting, adjusting and comparing two devices at three different frequencies.

Impedance difference is measured in two ranges, 5% or 20% selected by a front panel switch, using a built generator and detector equipped with a 2AP1 CRT. A balance is achieved when the vertical deflection is at a minimum.

Dissipation factor difference is read directly from the dial in one range. The main change from the 1604-A is the addition of a 400 Hz test frequency.

Specifications

  • Deviation Range: Impedance difference, ±5% and ±20%, switched. Disipation factor difference, ±.006 at 400 Hz. ±.015 at 1 kHz. ±.075 at 5 kHz.
  • Test Frequency: 400 Hz, 1 kHz, and 5 kHz; The frequency is within ±3% of the nominal value.
  • Voltage Applied to Unknown: Approximately one volt, for impedances above 500 Ω. For lower values of impedance the voltage is decreased.

Links

Photos