Continue to Site

Welcome to our site!

Electro Tech is an online community (with over 170,000 members) who enjoy talking about and building electronic circuits, projects and gadgets. To participate you need to register. Registration is free. Click here to register now.

  • Welcome to our site! Electro Tech is an online community (with over 170,000 members) who enjoy talking about and building electronic circuits, projects and gadgets. To participate you need to register. Registration is free. Click here to register now.

Which budget Oscilloscope?

Status
Not open for further replies.

Tea

New Member
I am just starting electronics and I think a scope would be a good way to see what is going on. The cpc.farnell (UK) web site has 6 listed between £90 and £180. Are these worth it, or are they junk, is there a better suppler (UK), do they need to be calibrated (£?), is 10MHz good enough, what other specifications should I look for?

I know this is a subjective question, with a 'depends what you want it for' kind of answer; I have been working through Brindleys starting electronics and I want to do stuff with 555's and 741's on a bread board, and then quite small projects.

Thanks,

Rob.
 
The least amount possible. That is the least amount that will get me something that is worth having for simple hobby work. I guess this is how long is a piece of string territory, so no one is going to be able to give an answer, ah well never mind, I'll maybe take a gamble...:)
 
It's not so much difficult territory, just there is so much selection.

Do you need storage? Are you fussy about accuracy? What sort of signals will you be measuring (i.e. do you want to do digital, RF, audio work)?

Now is probably the right time to splash at Farnell UK, as they are selling off a whole load of kit cheap.
 
This topic has been discussed in many threads in the past, so it would be useful for you to search a bit and see what you can find. There are several opinions on this matter, because as you say, it depends on what you are doing. In general though, the beginner should work with a 100MHz bandwidth because the typical microprocessor circuits often have fast rise and fall times and to see these accurately, 100MHz bandwidth is the minimum requirement. From my experience, a high quality analog scope (Tektronix or Hewlett Packard for example) is the best value for the beginner. They sell for less than $200 and sometimes for less than $50. A good digital scope with equivalent performance often starts at $250 and goes up from there.

The simple analog scopes that I have much success with in the past include HP1725a, Tek 465, HP1740. My favorite series of entry level digital scope is the Tektronix TDS20xx series, but these are very new and too expensive most of the time. Many others have enjoyed using Tektronix 24xx and 22xx series and TDS3xx or TDS4xx series which are older digital scopes. I do not happen to like these very much as the front panel controls have poor feel and poor layout in some models. However, other than that, many older Tektronix and HP or Agilent scopes can be very good value if you can get one at a good price that works well.
 
It depends on what you want to do.

If it's just for audio or the odd PIC circuit 10MHz is enough. A 10MHz 'scope will be able to tell if an audio amplifier is oscillating and you should be able to see a 4MHz clock signal with it although (as Ron says) you won't be able to gauge the rise/fall time.

If you need to get into digital electronics then you'll need a faster 'scope, 100MHz should be good enough to most applications.
 
I am not total sure. I don't need storage. I am not too fussy on accuracy, but it need to be good enough to be meaningful. I want to do digital, but I don't really knoe what that means yet:) I am thinking of the TECSTAR - CS1010 - 10MHZ OSCILLOSCOPE
Thanks, Rob.

PS

In the UK the cheapest 100MHz scope I can find is £616. But then my search skills are a bit duff as I did not find anything here on 'which budget scope to purchase' :)
 
Last edited:
Thanks for the answer. This sounds like a really dumb (newbe) question but, why is single channel not much use? Thanks.
 
Because you can't compare tow signals simultaneously.

Take the simple astable 555 timer circuit, to debug it you'll want to look at the waveform at the output and across the capacitor.

Another example is an amplifier, being able to see both the input and output signals simultaneously will give you an idea of the phase shift.
 
I am not total sure. I don't need storage. I am not too fussy on accuracy, but it need to be good enough to be meaningful. I want to do digital, but I don't really knoe what that means yet:) I am thinking of the TECSTAR - CS1010 - 10MHZ OSCILLOSCOPE
Thanks, Rob.

PS

In the UK the cheapest 100MHz scope I can find is £616. But then my search skills are a bit duff as I did not find anything here on 'which budget scope to purchase' :)


149 UK pounds doesn't seem like a very good value. Those of us in North America have better access to a much larger market of used high quality scopes, so when I looked at Ebay UK I was disappointed with the selection and prices. In any case, this one would be a better value at about 50pound or less:
**broken link removed**

It appears that used 100MHz digital scopes tend to sell in the range of 80 to 150 UKpounds on ebay UK. This one seems typical:
**broken link removed**
 
Last edited:
Thanks, I see that I need two channels, and probably 100MHz => not new. The Tecstar is on offer at £100.62, but it is 1 channel & 10MHz, so I'll have to go for the 2nd hand market. I am not too desperate, so I will bide my time. Thanks for definitive information.
 
I have an old Gould Advance OS250S oscilloscope.

It broke once but has started working again although it isn't perfect, the display does oscillate (flashes on and off) at low brightness settings. It's still perfectly usable as long as you don't turn the intensity down too low.

It you can come round and collect it then you can have it for £10.

Send me a private message if you're interested.

Read this thread before even considering my offer.
https://www.electro-tech-online.com/threads/dead-scope.24913/
 
Last edited:
Status
Not open for further replies.

Latest threads

New Articles From Microcontroller Tips

Back
Top