BNCs For An Old Instrument

Back in the summer our eye was caught by [Jazzy Jane]ā€™s new signal generator, or perhaps we should say her new-to-her signal generator. Itā€™s an Advance E1 from around 1950, and it was particularly interesting from here because it matches the model on the shelf above this bench. Sheā€™s back with a new video on the E1, allowing us a further look inside it as she replaces a dead capacitor, gets its audio oscillator working, and upgrades its sockets.

Treating us to a further peek inside the unit, first up is a leaky capacitor. Then a knotty question for old tech enthusiasts, to upgrade or not? The ancient co-ax connectors are out of place on a modern bench, so does originality matter enough to give it a set of BNC sockets? Weā€™d tend to agree; just because we have some adapters for the unit here doesnā€™t mean itā€™s convenient. Following on from that is a period variable frequency audio mod which has failed, so out that comes and a little fault-finding is required to get the wiring of the audio transformer.

These instruments are not by any means compact, but they do have the advantage of being exceptionally well-built and above all cheap. We hope readers appreciate videos like the one below the break, and that youā€™re encouraged not to be scared of diving in to older items like this one to fix them. Meanwhile the first installment is here.



from Blog ā€“ Hackaday https://ift.tt/agciTd3

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