The adaptors I linked to will plug into the existing socket on the Metrix and provide a BNC or F type without altering the unit.
The center contact of the Metrix probably just needs a clean and maybe a gentle squeeze together of the split.
Thanks for actually be willing to help, rather than judge, that's refreshing. If only they could all be like you, how friendly and productive TEA would be, not to mention the SNR would skyrocket.
I grabbed my LED torch light and threw some serious Lumens into that socket, I noticed that the two halves of the split inner core were actually joining at their very bottom, it's in fact one single piece of metal. Therefore it did not make sense that one half was giving me a signal and not the other. Had to be bad connection. And when I saw the staggering amount of crust covering 100% of all surfaces in that socket, all black in there, thick layer.... it further reinforced the hypothesis. So I did what I could to clean it. Attacked it first with a tiny flat screw driver to break up most of the black crust, blew some human air in there to force the debris out. Then flooded the socket with contact cleaner / Deoxit, agitated it with the stiff hair of a nylon brush. That loosened the remaining crap. Then using the screw driver again, I managed to shove a kitchen paper towel deep into the socket to dry it and take all the debris out.
Now looks soooooooooo much better ! Shiny and clean, almost like new. What I thought was "patina" from a distance, was in fact just crust and nothing else.
Fired up the scope and generator, now works much better.....
Will order a BNC adapter and see how it goes, but should do it I think...
Vince, most of would have told you the same thing as Robert did, so I'm guessing, the others made the same mistake I did, assumed that A/ you were aware that the 2 halves are joined at the base,
Well I understand... but no, I am not old enough to be familiar with these sockets on test gear (as for TV I never had the opportunity / reason as a kid, to autopsy them, and then as an adult as I said I never had a TV so didn't care).
The only old sockets I am familiar with are the BNC and UHF found on my old Tek scopes... but none of my Tek scopes have General-Lee sockets.
I have only two pieces of TE with these connectors, other one being the Wobuloscope which I did not restore. So this RF generator is the very first piece of TE where I have the opportunity to look closely at this style of socket... you gotta start somewhere.... some day. This is the day !
B/ assumed that you had tried to clean the socket and
I guess that was a fair assumption here .... a bit ashamed that I did not try that first
. If I did not it's because as I said initially it seemed to me that symptoms showed the inner core was defective and therefore needed replacement, so it was logical from there, not to bother cleaning it... cleaning a defective/broken socket was not going to magically repair it
But then once I saw the core was a single piece of metal, defective it could not bre anymore. Then when I realized it would be impossible to find a suitable replacement socket, the situation changed and going through the trouble of trying to clean the thing, now made a lot more sense.
That was went through my mind any way....
But that's how you learn ! Next time I have problems with such a connector, I won't make the same mistakes of course...
C/ squeezed the 2 split ends closer together, gently with a pair of long nose pliers.
That would have not fixed anything since I was had no adapter to shove between the two parts of the core, so nothing to tighten the core onto.
I was using my scope probe, not having other choices, and pressed its tip one one half of the core at a time, contacting the inside of the core and pressing outwards, as it would give me the most stable / comfortable position one-handed, and let me use the other hand to operate the scope and the generator.
In the past, I have replaced similar sockets with panel mounted BNC sockets with no noticeable drop in performance, but a significant increase in the durability of the socket.
Not worried about performance in this case.. as I said the only reason I am trying to avoid replacing the old socket with a BNC is for looks (it protrudes a lot instead of being flush, looks out of place) and originality. It just does not look period, would look weird on this instrument.