What's up with
the fonts ?
It is not usual thing here on EEVBlog. I don't it mind personally, just saying.
You bought device used with no warranty. From someone who did God knows what to it.
For instance, someone might have tried to update FW and it lost power during process and some data inside got scrambled.
Or it was customer return that underwent who knows what kind of abuse...
You didn't get defective model. That phrase means something else.
You got broken device. Which is exactly what you bought. A cat in a bag.
This is exact reason why I recommend people to buy new with warranty, from reputable local dealer..
Sometimes they have "demo" units for very good price, and they will still give warranty for it.
As for the test, it is
you who need to test it. Use scope, 50 Ω BNC loads (or scope with 50Ω inputs), and some coax cables.
Self tests cannot test everything. For instance, input connectors and such.
Go through waveforms on both channels and verify they all produce correct signal.
Then go through levels on both channels, and verify that signal levels are correct.
100 Mhz scope should have flat enough frequency response for this test.
It shouldn't take you more than half an hour to go through enough combinations to verify all the waveforms and to verify all attenuator ranges on output work correctly.
https://www.siglenteu.com/wp-content/uploads/dlm_uploads/2022/06/SDG1000X_ServiceManual_SM0201X-E01B.pdfPage 35 Performance verification.
Make note that on page 38, amplitude specifications are in dBm (power).
Those numbers translated to voltages mean that when AWG is set to 1 V P-P you should read anywhere from 0,966 to 1,035V P-P and if you set generator for 2.5V P-P then output amplitude needs to be between 2,416 and 2,588 V.
Across the whole frequency band of AWG. If it is inside that interval the you are good.
As I said, use good (and short) BNC coax cables, and on measuring device side (scope for instance) you need to have 50 Ω termination (good external pass through terminator or internal to scope).