What sort of transistors did they use?
We can look it up since these designs were fully documented. For the 7834 z-axis amplifier:
Q2242 Fast NPN 151-0411-00 6-5&13 2N5109
1.2GHz @15V@50mA 30V 3pF 400mA TO-39
Selected for rb'Cc<10ps
Q2274 Fast PNP 151-0417-00 6-19 Unknown
400MHz@10mA 4.5pF 40V 100mA TO-106
Q2274 Fast PNP 151-0220-00 6-3&15 2N3906
600MHz @20V@10mA 40V 4.5pF 200mA TO-92
Selected for rb'Cc<50ps
Q2254 Cascode PNP 151-0270-00 6-6&15 2N3495 151-0270-03 8-7 Selected
150MHz @10V@20mA 150V 3.5pF 300mA TO-39
Later selected for high hfe, high Vce, low Co, and high reliability
Q2264 Cascode NPN 151-0274-00 6-6&12 2N3501S 151-0274-01 8-8 Selected
150MHz @5V@50mA 150V 4.5pF 250mA TO-30
Later selected for high hfe, high Vce, low Co, and high reliability
Q2274 was original some bizarre specialized part but they replaced it with a 2N3906 selected for low collector-base time constant. Tektronix also used these selected 2N3906s in their 100MHz 22xx oscilloscopes which seems odd to me because they had faster but still inexpensive parts available by then.
The cascode transistors were later selected for better performance and reliability. I assume they had too many boards which were not fast enough or slowed down after being in service. Would a transistor lose gain after days of burn in?
For the PG508 pulse generator:
Q990 PNP Cascode 151-0285-00 6-8&15 2N5160
Q1060 PNP Gain 151-0285-00 6-8&15 2N5160
500MHz @15V@50mA 40V 4pF 400mA TO-39
Q1070 NPN Cascode 151-0211-00 2N3866
Q980 NPN Gain 151-0211-00 2N3866
500MHz @25V@25mA 50V 3pF 400mA TO-39
Q1010 NPN Output Follower 151-0411-00 6-5&13 2N5109
1.2GHz @15V@50mA 30V 3pF 400mA TO-39
Selected for rb'Cc<20ps
Q1095 PNP Output Follower 151-0450-00 6-5&15 2N5583 Selected
1.2GHz @5V@150mA 35V 3.5pF 500mA TO-39
Selected for rb'Cc<10ps
These are all RF tranistors. The PG508 uses a linear output stage because it allows variable edge rates which suggests looking at the 40 MHz output stage of the Tektronix FG504 function generator might be instructive. HP had some similar instruments. The big difference here compared to the 7843 z-axis amplifier is that the PG508 must be able to drive a 50 ohm load so they added a class-AB follower after the cascode output stage.
Did they have an especially high GBWP?
High voltage cascode transistors are not especially fast because that conflicts with high Ft. The quest for higher bandwidth vertical CRT amplifiers in oscilloscopes was more about achieving higher deflection sensitivity in the CRT so that lower voltage higher bandwidth transistors could be used. The 2N5109 is a real RF transistor. The 2N3906 was selected for high Ft.
One of the problems with fast rise/fall times is the transistors have very little current gain, I suppose it's possible to operate them above the GBWP, because they still have some voltage gain, even though the current gain is below one, but a very source low impedance is required.
Bipolar transistors used in common base mode can have voltage gain yielding power gain after the current gain bandwidth product drops below one.
The input to the cascode transistors is very low impedance. If necessary their output capacitance can be minimized by operating at high minimum Vce and they might be selected for low output capacitance anyway like transistors for the voltage gain stage of audio power amplifiers. Those transistors are also getting hard to find which is why I mentioned the problem with availability of suitable parts being poorer than in the past.
Also note that a class-AB push-pull configuration delivers twice the transconductance because both sides are contributing to the output.
Without any output cascode stages or bypass capacitors, the 5 transistor 2N3904/2N3906 RS-232 level shifter I designed hit 50 nanoseconds without even trying although with a current output, this was sensitive to capacitive loading. Actually looking at it now, I see that I used 2N4401s and 2N4403s which makes that even more impressive. Unfortunately I don't know where I put the schematic. It was just something I hacked together one afternoon and I choose an nontraditional but ordinary design for it just to see what kind of performance was actually possible with jelly bean parts. When next I make one, I will include output cascode transistors.