Early Electronic Frequency Meter & Counter

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The HP 500A Frequency Meter

Before Counter was Meter

The very first occurrence of an electronic device to measure frequency was only 3 years after the company's creation. It was a natural complement to the early Hewlett Packard audio oscillator production. The 500A, analog electronic frequency meter was described as follow in the 1943 catalog:

The frequency meter consists of a wide band amplifier with a limiting circuit, and electronic switch, a constant current supply, a frequency discriminating circuit, and an output meter and rectifier. The input signal is amplified and used to switch the constant current source to alternate load resistors. The voltage developed across these resistors is applied to a condenser, and the output meter indicates the average value of the rectified charging current. The circuit is designed so that each pulse of charging current has the same average value, making the meter reading proportional to the number of charges per second, and hence proportional to the frequency of the input signal. The reading is practically independent of the input voltage wave form, as normal wave form errors cannot affect the electronic switching operation. The regulated current source makes the reading independent of variations in input signal voltage and line voltage. A multiplier switch in the meter circuit provides ten convenient scale ranges. Provision is made for checking the calibration against power line frequency, and an adjustment is provided for changing the overall calibration if necessary.

This technique gave the HP 500A a usable measurement range of 10 cps to 50,000 cps, with full scale meter deflection switched in 1, 2, 5, 10 sequences. An input voltage of at least 0.5 volts was required in the input impedance of 50,000 Ohms and the overall accuracy was plus or minus 2% of full scale value.

 

 

The HP 500B Frequency Meter

1955 - HP 500B Frequency Meter

Even if digital frequency counters already existed in 1955, frequency meters kept some obvious interests in the low frequency spectrum: Low cost, and output voltage proportional to the meter reading for analog recording.

The 500B evolution of the 500A offered another output jack on its front panel which provided a discriminator output for FM measurement and monitoring.

Other improvements brought by the 500B were:
A wider frequency range, extended to 100,000 cps on the high end and 3 cps on the low end.
A 3 to 10 time expendable scale feature enables frequency changes to be measured with increased accuracy.

 

 

The Second HP Leadership

Just as the 1940s HP leadership in audio instrumentation was triggered by the Bill Hewlett's 200A oscillator the 1951, HP 524A frequency counter would be the second "big success" product. This started the very long HP leadership in frequency measurement. John Minck 's narrative gives a precise analysis of how the digital frequency counter at HP began:

"As the nation recovered from WWII, the atomic energy business was big time. Not only was nuclear research welcomed, but all sorts of other nuclear advances were predicted, from chemical to pharmaceuticals to medicine. Crucial to such developments was the measuring instrumentation that was needed for nuclear data. Pulse counting and energy profiling was one area that appealed to HP.
The pulses, of course, were those derived from nucleus decay and detected by various crystalline sensors. The horsepower race of those days, was to build counters that count higher and higher rates of decay, and discriminate between two closely-separated radiation pulses, the closer the better.
A fellowship grant made to Al Bagley, a young graduate student at Stanford University in 1948, led to the development of HP's frequency counter business. Hewlett and Packard personally asked student Bagley to study the measurement needs of the nuclear physics industry. From that study came requirements for a faster nuclear-pulse-counting technology, that could resolve two nuclear events, only 0.1 microsecond apart. Bagley determined that new, low-capacitance semiconductor diodes, just coming on the market might allow faster digital circuitry. He built a prototype as part of his project—and asked for a job at HP.
Out of that work, came the HP 520A high speed decimal scaler, which was able to condition very short nuclear pulses, occurring at up to 10 mc. It also divided down the count rate by factors of 10 or 100. Sadly, the 520A had only minimal commercial success. However, Hewlett envisioned a different measurement process, one that gated those scaled-down, high-speed pulses into a slower-speed accumulator (counter). It used a selectable time base, similar to that of the earlier WWII HP 100A time standard. Out of this combination was born the common frequency counter.
Those "combination" frequency counters were a huge commercial success, and in great demand from the 1950's onward. They were used in measuring everything from transmitter frequencies to the accelerometers on which ballistic missile guidance systems were based. HP became the industry leader in electronic counting, in the early 1950's, with the HP 524A frequency counter (ca. 1952), which boasted a 0.01 cps to 10 "mc" measuring range. (Hertz came a little later.)
"

Main Specifications of the 524A Frequency Counter in the 1952 Catalog 21-A
Courtesy of the Hewlett Packard company

 

HP 524D Frequency Counter with 526B Time Interval Drawer

The HP 524 Counter Evolution

In 1954, plug-in down-converters were added and introduced as the HP 524B electronic counter, which became an industry standard for some years. 4 Plug-ins were available for the 524B:
The 525A Frequency Converter extended counter's basic 10 cps to 10 mc range up to 100 mc.
The 525B Frequency Converter gave counter range from 100 to 220 mc.
The 526A Video Amplifier increased counter's sensitivity to 10 millivolts for low level work.
The 526B Time Interval Unit (shown in the 524D photo on left) measured intervals, 1 microsecond to 100 days with an accuracy of 0.1 microsecond.

In 1955 the 540A Transfer Oscillator was introduced, connected to a 524B Counter with a 525A Converter Plug-in installed, frequencies up to 12 KMC could be measured.

The 1959 catalog introduced the last two upgrades of the 524 series. The 524D (left photo) replaced the two meters last digits display by decade numerical readout, for a full 8 digits numerical display (shown below). The 524C, for a slightly higher price, offered a bright, big-numbered Nixies readout.



Closeup of the HP Memory collection HP 524D Frequency Counter display, measuring a 13,912,396 Hertz signal

 

HP 540A Transfer Oscillator & HP 524D Frequency Counter in the 1958 short-form catalog
Courtesy of the Hewlett Packard company

 

The HP 521C Frequency Counter

The First Portable and Low Cost Frequency Counter

The 521A introduced in 1955 was the first occurence of a moderately priced, small size frequency counter.
$475 for 12 Kg to be compared to the $2,500 and 55 Kg of the 524B open the field of frequency measurement out of the lab.

From 1 cps to 120 Kcs, the 521A measures frequency, speed, rpm and rps and counts events occurring at random within a selected period of time. With proper transducers converting mechanical into electrical phenomena, the instrument will also measure weight, pressure, temperature, acceleration and other quantities which can be related to frequency. This is one more sign in HP's strategy to enpand their product lines to provide answers to the many problems found in industry.

As shown in the diagrams below, two models of such a transducer were available for the measurement of rotating shaft speeds of up to 300,000 rpm.

 

Animation Display: Interior Panoramic View of the HP 521C

 

Drawing from Hewlett-Packard Journal July, 1955 - Courtesy of the Hewlett Packard company

 

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