No. It's what I specified.
I took it apart and have some (what I feel are decent) shots of the construction. It appears to be constructed rather well, I can't speak about the quality of chips used however, as this is beyond my knowledge. I really love the interface, it's simple to use and makes sense. My main reason for purchasing it, was I don't have the bench space for a nice traditional function generator, and I just wanted to do some testing with low/high pass filters and other things. I do intend to get a proper signal generator and realize this is no replacement for one, but I feel like this thing will prove useful for my needs.
The anodized aluminum case is rather nice, it's pretty thick, doesn't feel like I could set something on it and it would begin to bend. It's machined rather well.
It appears to use a resistor ladder for a DAC rather than an IC also.
Anyways, here are the pictures of the innards:
![](http://i.imgur.com/aJWlZYcl.jpg)
LCD PCB:
![](http://i.imgur.com/PUrAJNBl.jpg)
![](http://i.imgur.com/yw86MVMl.jpg)
Here's the (cheap, LCMXO2-1200HC-4TG144C) FPGA it uses:
![](http://i.imgur.com/0BHxpLLl.jpg)
![](http://i.imgur.com/XF8UNq7l.jpg)
Near the DC adaptor plug:
![](http://i.imgur.com/pcXOixpl.jpg)
Here's the heat sink removed where the 2 output channels are. I'm unsure what these 2 chips are as the heatsink wore off the label:
![](http://i.imgur.com/V2OCO8kl.jpg)
Back of the main PCB:
![](http://i.imgur.com/Y86uIAul.jpg)
I highly doubt the 10Mhz and 20Mhz model use updated hardware and it's just software locked.