In article <MPG.1d0d7ac4f4a073989754@localhost>,
(E-Mail Removed) says...
> In article <d808c5$u6p$(E-Mail Removed)>, (E-Mail Removed)
> says...
>
> Without knowing your specific requirements, I can't really make
> any in-depth suggestions. However, again, I would avoid PC-based 'scopes
> on general principles. I would be stunned if any of them can perform as
> well as a good dedicated 'scope for a comparable price/value figure.
>
> Happy hunting.
Dunno about that. I think the most important feature of a DSO, even
beyond temporary waveform storage, is recordability. Increasingly, I
find that if I don't save a measurement for recall perhaps months later,
I might as well have never made it. That, and the user interface. If I
hate the UI, I'll try not to use the scope in the first place.
The features that differentiate a Tek DSO and a cheap PC DSO are all
secondary to these two factors. Where the Teks shine is in the details,
not the feature set. When you select Ch1-Ch2 mode, for instance, where
does the math happen? Even Tek's cheaper current scopes do it in image
space, which means both Ch1 and Ch2's waveforms need to be entirely
onscreen. You don't want that. Where does the cheap PC DSO adapter do
it? And when the waveform *is* driven far offscreen, how long does it
take to recover? Etc.
Keep in mind that commodity components available to the PC DSO adapter
vendors today are in most cases better than the exotic stuff available
to the designers at Tek in the early Eighties, when most gear accessible
to current hobbyists on the surplus market was built. Certainly nobody
would build a DSO with a 1K record length today (I hope).
Price is important for most folks, too, and for the price of the GPIB
card and cable I have to use with my Tek 2430A DSO if I want to keep
waveforms around, you can get a full-featured PC scope with similar
specs.
If you're serious at all, you pretty much either have to buy a high-$
DPO scope, or you still need an analog scope on the bench right next to
your DSO. I would be tempted to tell people to put the money into the
*analog* scope, and buy the cheapest PC DSO that fits your needs at any
given moment.
-- jm
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