Your cart is empty.
Your cart is empty.defleron
Reviewed in the United States on June 4, 2024
I have contacted Amazon and they agreed to exchange it. I hope this is not a recurring problem with this manufacturer. I will update this review if possible, or create another review for the exchanged item..
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on March 13, 2024
The media could not be loaded.
Bob Hyde
Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2024
Ease of use, and specs. Retired my old Heathkit.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on January 11, 2024
I've been using this signal generator for the past 6 months to test and calibrate radio, HiFi, and Stereo equipment. It does everything that generators costing hundreds more can do. One minor quibble: When using modulation, it would be great if it could stay on when switching to the main signal screen to adjust the frequency or level. It's inconvenient to lose modulation when trying to make those adjustments.
Steve
Reviewed in the United States on July 24, 2023
Nice output range. lightweight. Easy to use. comes with windows compatible software. the software does not let you adjust the screen size so it's a little wonky on a laptop.I'd buy it again.
Ole Larsen KC5AKQ
Reviewed in the United States on October 10, 2023
Glad I got this generator, very happy with it. As an old school retired industrial/radio station engineer, I had fun testing it's functions. PC software install was bug free. Frequency accuracy is excellent, after a 30 minute warm up. AC amplitude accuracy is also very good. When using the DC source, the output is about 10% high. Haven't tested the counter yet, but I'll bet it is accurate.
James Paul Oehlke
Reviewed in the United States on December 28, 2022
unboxing test of unit frequency was dead on . reference test to two SDR receivers same steady output
Viking Lawyer
Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2022
I already own a very nice HP signal generator, but it takes up half my work bench. I watched some people review this same generator and bitched about the voltage going up and down as you sweep the frequency. I marveled at their nice expensive scopes and other equipment but was dumbfounded how they did not know what they were doing while complaining about the voltage swings or how the square waves were not very square at 80 mHz. Duh....Folks, if you're going to do a video review - at least admit you don't know what you're really doing.Things to know to test this properly are:1) Use 50 Ohm coax to connect it to your scope.2) Make sure the end at the scope is terminated with a 50 ohm load resistor.3) Set a reasonable voltage, say 1 volt P-P.4) Set the output to a sine wave. Don't expect a square wave to look very square at 80 mHzNow you'll get a steady output all up and down with less than 3dB variation. In my case quite a bit less on one channel but slightly more on the other.For the money this is a great deal and you can modulate the output externally which is wonderful if you're and RF guy like I am.
Recommended Products