The CERN antiproton accumulator uses a conventional RF system for bunched beam manipulation within the ring. Several different manipulations are needed, often in close succession, so a fast, reliable and accurate method of switching between them is required. This has led to an unconventional computerized beam control system. For a desired set of beam manipulations, the computer calculates the needed voltage and frequency as functions of time, using a mathematical model of the beam and lattice. These are then loaded into function generators which subsequently operate independently of the computer. The RF system, a dual gap, ferrite loaded cavity driven by a 4CX25000 power tetrode, has three main uses: the stacking process to accumulate the antiprotons, the unstacking process to make the accumulated antiprotons available for extraction, and a variety of test and measurement purposes. Two digital function generators control voltage and frequency in the cavity. The voltage function is logarithmic and is fed into an AVC loop which contains a logarithmic detector and modulator to provide high voltage for stacking and low voltage for unstacking. The frequency function controls a 10 to 30 kHz quadrature VCO which is mixed with the output of a quadrature synthesizer producing an 1840more » to 1860 kHz frequency range. RF phase and magnet noise were harmful while manipulating low emittance proton and antiproton bunches. A high-pass phase loop acquires beam cavity phase; adding AC corrections to the frequency program eliminated this problem. The cavity tune is maintained by a tuning loop acting on a DC ferrite base. Schematics are provided.« less