Help finding a Reputable frequency generator brand?

Good morning everyone. So am looking for a Frequency generator to send through my speaker drivers and test them. I see a lot of knock offs on e bay and amazon? I can buy a used one but, am looking for one I can plug my speaker driver into and it does sweeps as well? Am looking more of a teaching and learning instead a click of a button by using my Woofer tester #2. I did see one on line from a science website about sound kit and Demonstration about sound and sand and patterns. How to It do with the earthquakes and other things. It only went up to 1Khz and I need it to go at least to 20khz or higher. Like the picture I posted? Thanks Jeff
 

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Especially for just audio band stuff into a speaker, a basic soundcard and a power amp will be the most effective solution, there's plenty of software to generate test tones, even if you have any phone with a headphone jack, there's an app for that..If you need a specific output voltage it's easy to just connect a multimeter to your amp output and adjust accordingly.
 
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...am looking for a Frequency generator to send through my speaker drivers and test them..
I have seen one old-school audio signal generator that had a built-in power amplifier capable of driving a loudspeaker. But that was quite a rare exception.

Most signal generators have a 600 ohm or 50 ohm output impedance, and cannot drive enough output current to connect directly to a typical loudspeaker, with its low impedance of 4 to 8 ohms.

On the plus side, these days it's easy to obtain a small, light, cheap class D power amplifier that you can drive from any signal source (including PC or 'phone), and which can drive a loudspeaker. This opens up an enormous range of possible signal sources.

I've measured frequency responses manually when I had no alternative. IMO, it's an incredibly tedious job. To get a decent plot, you have to measure at a lot of different frequencies (at least 20 or 30 per decade of frequency). Then enter all your data into a spread sheet, make a log-log plot, etc. So tedious! So error-prone!

That said, if you do want to do this manually, I spotted this old-school Wien-bridge audio function generator on Amazon.ca. The price is ten times lower than it used to be decades ago, in the heyday of such devices: https://www.amazon.ca/TIWWS-TAG-101...n/dp/B078LTJ8LP/ref=sr_1_5?crid=2G1S6APUCGWNC

Add a little class-D audio power amp between that signal generator and your speaker, and you're up and away.

Note that most of today's class-D power amps have bridged outputs, meaning neither end of the speaker will be at ground voltage...plan accordingly if you're going to connect an oscilloscope to the speaker-level signal!

-Gnobuddy