1001-A: Difference between revisions

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* [[Media:GR 1001A Signal Generator 09_1967.pdf|General Radio 1001-A Signal Generator Manual 1001-0100-O (1967)]]
* [[Media:GR 1001A Signal Generator 09_1967.pdf|General Radio 1001-A Signal Generator Manual 1001-0100-O (1967)]]
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The '''General Radio 1001-A''' is a standard signal generator introduced in 1951 Catalog M and remained available through Catalog73.  
The '''General Radio 1001-A''' is a standard signal generator introduced in 1951 Catalog M and remained available through Catalog 1973.  
 
The 1001-A is a lab grade signal generator covering a frequency range 0f 5 kHz to 50 MHz. It has a calibrated attenuator with output 0.1 μV to 200 Mv
The 1001-A is a lab grade signal generator covering a frequency range 0f 5 kHz to 50 MHz. It has a calibrated attenuator with output 0.1 μV to 200 Mv
also 2 V direct output. The internal RF oscillator and turret band switch are removable for servicing.  Inside the cabinet is an alignment tool (hex) for adjusting the oscillator turret coils.
also 2 V direct output. The internal RF oscillator and turret band switch are removable for servicing.  Inside the cabinet is an alignment tool (hex) for adjusting the oscillator turret coils.

Revision as of 20:42, 7 March 2024

General Radio 1001-A
standard signal generator
General Radio 1001-A Signal Generator

Available from 1951 to 1973

Manuals
(All manuals in PDF format unless noted otherwise)

The General Radio 1001-A is a standard signal generator introduced in 1951 Catalog M and remained available through Catalog 1973.

The 1001-A is a lab grade signal generator covering a frequency range 0f 5 kHz to 50 MHz. It has a calibrated attenuator with output 0.1 μV to 200 Mv also 2 V direct output. The internal RF oscillator and turret band switch are removable for servicing. Inside the cabinet is an alignment tool (hex) for adjusting the oscillator turret coils.


Specifications

  • Frequency Range: 5 kHz to 50 MHz in 8 bands.
  • Accuracy: ±1% of reading.
  • Stability: Warmup drift is in the order of 0.25%. Half the maximum drift is reached in approximately 1½ hours.
  • Amplitude Modulation: 0 to 80%, continuously variable, indicated on the panel meter to ±10% of reading.
  • Modulation Frequency: 400 Hz internal, 20 Hz to 15 kHz external modulation.
  • Output Impedance: 10 Ω except the 100 mV multiplier setting 50 Ω, 300 Ω at the 2 V output.


Links

Photos