Gould SSG-220 RF signal generator

The place to be when you have TEA. Discuss all kinds of test equipment.

Important: Use tags for the type of equipment your topic is about.
Forum rules
Use tags for the type of equipment your topic is about. Include the "repairs" tag, too, when appropriate. If a new tag is needed, request one in the TEAdministration forum.
Post Reply
synx508
Posts: 174
Joined: Mon Aug 21, 2023 6:13 am
Location: UK

Gould SSG-220 RF signal generator

Post by synx508 »

At the Dunstable Downs boot sale I picked up this delightful signal generator for £20 (ignore the sticker, I waited until it had been ignored for a few hours and the price dropped)

Image

It's a nicely made signal generator with incredible internal screening, a fanless design, which I always like. It's fitted with a rather excellent attenuator, too. Sadly this unit isn't fitted with the GPIB option, there's a blanked off rear socket and two empty card slots inside for this.

Chucking the signal into my 3585A reveals that the 2f harmonic is usually around 40dB down on the carrier and there's a persistent spur exactly -720kHz from the carrier at about -65dBc, not an exciting start, but when you look closer the peak is very narrow and the noise floor is very low. I think it must've been designed for low phase noise. Residual FM is ten times better than either of my Marconi 2019/2019As. I wasn't expecting that, because on the face of it, it's a fairly basic signal generator. All the numeric front panel programming happens using thumb-lever digital switches, they're like thumbwheels but you waggle a lever and the digit flings itself from 0-9 effortlessly. They're nice to use. You can also set a step size to increment or decrement the frequency, which is displayed on a green LED display.

Despite the sticker claiming that it's slightly dodgy everything worked properly except the internal reference oscillator's oven which was only drawing 9mA and not getting warm. It only warmed up using the heat from the nearby power supply and even then didn't get to the correct frequency.

The OCXO was a 10MHz Cathodeon part, it gets divided by 10 immediately and the external connections for reference in/out are all at 1MHz.

Image

This was being supplied with +5V and +12V, with the +12V optionally present when the generator's front panel switch is set to "off".

As I had a stock of several Decca 10MHz OCXOs with a nearly identical footprint that I'd bought as part of a job lot of component cabinets at Milton Keynes a few years ago I thought I'd pop one of these in.
The Decca only needs +12V but has an additional pin that is used for oven current sensing, so you can warn the user that the oven isn't up to temperature with some sort of indicator light, klaxon or malodorous gas release mechanism. The Decca doesn't require +5V but has enough output to toggle the logic, the pin that had +5V on it is a +7.3V ovenised Zener stabilised output. For now I am not using this for anything and conveniently the current sense pin on the Decca is shrouded in ceramic, so I drilled the PCB to match this which had the effect of severing the +5V line at the same time.

Image

The tuning voltage for the OCXO comes from the power supply board, possibly from a simple shunt Zener regulator. There's a multiturn adjustment potentiometer wired as a voltage divider. Drift is not amazingly great on that "stabilised" voltage and spends rather longer than I'd like wandering before settling down. I am considering moving the hot end of the tuning voltage pot to the +7.3V from the Decca. Having said that, it's not *bad* and half an hour after power-up there are 10 non-changing numbers on the frequency counter.

Here's a view of the rather tidy interior. The attenuator is canted to make it fit. There's a slab of aluminium between the PSU and the rest of it, this is also laminated with some of that mu-metal stuff, or similar. I'm surprised they didn't use a toroidal mains transformer. The PCBs have a solder resist and silkscreen on the component side (except the pictured oscillator, weirdly) but oddly they don't even have any of that on the solder side, which is a bit of a let down. Also, no gold, but everything worked bar the oscillator oven and that's not bad going for something made in 1981. It doesn't appear to have been worked on previously.

Image

Tags:
User avatar
EC8010
Posts: 319
Joined: Mon Sep 08, 2025 12:41 am

Re: Gould SSG-220 RF signal generator

Post by EC8010 »

synx508 wrote: Tue Jun 02, 2026 10:23 am I'm surprised they didn't use a toroidal mains transformer.
It's difficult to fit an effective E/S screen to a toroid but fairly easy on an EI transformer. Worse, toroids have high CPS compared to an EI transformer of the same VA rating because the area between primary and secondary is (unavoidably) much larger.

I note the complete lack of defluxing on the PCBs.

Charming description: "Slightly dodgy"

At £20, it was a bargain. But it is also a boat anchor...
Zenith
Posts: 1573
Joined: Sat Oct 22, 2022 9:06 pm

Re: Gould SSG-220 RF signal generator

Post by Zenith »

I saw that on the pitch where the bloke was also trying to sell a huge HP A0 plotter. I'd bought my quota of junk, and I already have a spare Marconi 2019 which has a few problemettes to deal with, so I didn't investigate. I suspected he'd want considerably more than £20 for it.

Anyway, a good buy and nice to hear it doesn't have too many problems.
synx508
Posts: 174
Joined: Mon Aug 21, 2023 6:13 am
Location: UK

Re: Gould SSG-220 RF signal generator

Post by synx508 »

EC8010 wrote: Tue Jun 02, 2026 12:42 pm
synx508 wrote: Tue Jun 02, 2026 10:23 am I'm surprised they didn't use a toroidal mains transformer.
It's difficult to fit an effective E/S screen to a toroid but fairly easy on an EI transformer. Worse, toroids have high CPS compared to an EI transformer of the same VA rating because the area between primary and secondary is (unavoidably) much larger.

I note the complete lack of defluxing on the PCBs.

Charming description: "Slightly dodgy"

At £20, it was a bargain. But it is also a boat anchor...
TIL about that difference with toroidal transformers. Thank you for the facts!

The lack of flux removal also meant that I didn't need to bother, though perhaps I should've cleaned up some of the solder dust left over from removing the old oscillator.

As for boat anchors, I have two and two half HP 8505A network analyzer systems and a microwave sweeper in a leaning tower in the lounge that I really need to shift as I've not been sufficiently motivated to build the "one good system" from them - but have managed to repair many small faults, such that pretty much all of it works apart from only having one "good" display and one with a bad tube. I think it's going to be a challenge to get these into the latest car, a Fiat 500, which is even smaller than the previous Panda. I was after a Skoda Roomster but my wife said it'd be like driving a small shed around. I suppose the danger there is that I could fill a larger car with inbound junk…
Post Reply