Echoes from a distant past
Part five - The Rohde & Schwarz vacuum tube millivoltmeter UVN BN 12001
Part one - Siemens Rel. send. 22bPart two - The Two TransformersPart three - The Rohde & Schwarz NGU laboratory power supply unit for vacuum tubesPart four - The Rohde & Schwarz Vacuum Tube Meter URI BN 1050Part five - The Rohde & Schwarz UVN BN 12001 NF Millivoltmeter
Part six - The Nordmende digital multimeter DIVO 3355 (with Nixie tubes!)Hello,
today I'd like to introduce you the Rohde & Schwarz NF Millivoltmeter UVN BN 12001. It was produced in May 1962 and arrived at its customer in August 1962.
The specifications in short:
It can measure from 0.1mV up to 300V resp. -80 to +50dB
Frequency range: 20Hz to 20kHz balanced or 10Hz to 100kHz unbalanced
It can also be used as a measure amplifier with an amplification factor of 1000 (max 1V (0dB) rms output).
Symmetry damping depending on measuring range: > 40 ... 60dB or 4.6 ... 6.9 N (Neper)
The instrument came with the original manual, I'll add some pictures tomorrow.
But let's start with the front view:
Front view, details of the plate, right side with some jacks for connecting GND to 0V, the clamp itself, needs some cleaning, detailed view of the jacks, need some cleaning as well
Case opened:
top view, bottom view, details from the left side, bottom fixture of an electrolytic cap
Right side:
overview, shielded input transformer for the symmetrical input
Left side:
mains input with fuse, mains transformer, corroded fuse
Back side:
Party with vacuum tubes, a MP capacitor (Metal Propylene) with a date code 09/61, manufacturing date code 8th of May, 1962, precision resistor party, detailed view
The resistors have usually a tolerance of 0.5% and hide behind an Aluminium shield with the date code.
Some more detailed views of this beautiful instrument:
backside of the instrument, another MP cap in good shape, beautiful potentiometers
I did a little perfomance check with my R&S ADS arbitrary waveform generator. I've set the output to 1kHz sine and the output level to 0dB on the BN 12001. Then I increased the frequency until I got -3dB. This happened around 306kHz! Not bad! I couldn't measure the lower cut-off frequency, because the needle of the instrument only trembled.
Starting at 1kHz
-3dB cut-off at 306kHz
And here are some pictures from the manual which did come with the UVN.
28th of August, 1962 the UVN arrived at the customer, the specifications of the UVN, explanation of the origin of an interference voltage, explanation if a voltage drop occurs between the protective conductor connections between A and B, parts placement location map, map with red indexing, full scematic (hi-res, ca. 5 MByte)
I hope, you've enjoyed it.
I'll add the schematics and pictures of the specs tomorrow.
Thank you for watching!
Edit:
pictures from the manual added.