Cheap Arb Heads-up: UNI-T UTG962E Crappy BNC Jacks I posted this in the UTG962E thread; but I felt feel obligated to reiterate this warning here for my fellow TEA enthusiasts (and all those lurkers) who might be considering this little arb as a entry-level or even as a second or portable signal source.
While overall this little thing packs huge bang/buck, it has some truly horrible cheap-arse BNCs on (well, at least those which came on mine) it; as you can see, the center contact is not the usual machined bit, but rather just rolled sheet metal, and not very carefully rolled at that.
I noticed this when I was tinkering with it during the photo session for the wedge base under my 54645A I showed off in here; it had a finicky contact on one of the BNCs that would drop out if you wiggled the cable at all laterally. At first, I thought there was something wrong with the RG58/U cables I'd just made up from leftovers. But then I noticed that it did the same thing with the brand-new factory-made BNC jumper which came with the thing, and always on the same BNC jack.
Further inspection revealed the horror seen above; but worse,
inspection of the cable showed this connector was actually shaving metal off the center pin of those BNCs. I took many pics, but this was the best of them... unfortunately it doesn't well show the actual shaving of the metal which is visible to the eye under magnification. This is a brand-new BNC plug with maybe 6 mating cycles on it.
Yes, these things are built to a price; but I feel that having connectors which damage your expensive interconnect cables is definitely on the wrong side of the
too fukkin' cheap line; be forewarned.
So... while this generator is a great value function-wise, I advise you not to use any cables or probes with it that you care aboot... and that you probably should consider replacing these little horrors with a set of decent BNC jacks as part of the cost of ownership on this little beast; I'm planning to add them to my next BOM.
It might be okay with cables using a stainless steel BNC or maybe with a decent stainless BNC right angle as a intermediary connector; but I've only ever seen those in 75Ω.
EDIT: Disassembly and measurement shows these are clones of Amphenol 031-5486; the version with solid round (not forked) pins in white Valox. These are ~$7 each at Mouser or DigiKey. Any of the above Low-Profile receptacles should be a suitable replacement, however.
Datasheet attached below.
mnem