patroclus said:Hello!
I own an old second hand 20 MHz analog scope. It works fine, but it starts to show strange behaviors. I'm already saving money for a new one. I need it to be a digital scope, as most of my work is digital, and would really appreciate to capture non-periodical signals.
I rules those out soley because it's so MUCH MUCH faster to have 10 fingers and two hands working the scope rather than a single mouse cursor.kep said:hi all
so how about pc base oscilloscope having same capabilities isn't they cheap
patroclus said:Are you sure about the go no go feature??
**broken link removed**
I don't see any button for that... and it is not advertised. I'm quite sure it lacks of it... that would be bad.
Are you sure it's overseas? Because it seems to imply certain refurbished models are located in different areas. You said you were from Spain? I would have though the TDS1000 units in the European inventory wouldnt be overseas for you.patroclus said:Yes, but I don't want to buy overseas. I rather pay a bit more and get it here, because of possible faults or shipping damage (much faster, easier and cheaper to deal with a local store if the unit is faulty) and there're also the customs, etc...
Yeah, I too am wondering whether the extra $170 is worth it for a colour screen- it is only two lines after all and not 4.patroclus said:By the way, the model I can get here is the B. The other ones are not available. What I don't know yet, is if a monochrome LCD will be good enough, or if it worths the money going for colour. For 2 channels, it's not so important, just more confortable (for 4 channels I find colour almost essential).
patroclus said:Sorry, I might be confused. Maybe what I thought go no go was is not really. I think it's called mask.
What I was talking about is something you cam see in the first page of this datasheet.
https://www.electro-tech-online.com/custompdfs/2008/02/5989-2235EN-1.pdf
the top right image on top of the scope, where you can define a short of range around the wave, and if the capture wave "goes"
out that range / limit, then it detects it. I've seen it too in one of the cheap scopes I posted before. I think Tek doesn't offer it... I don't know if it's that great but it seems cool.
patroclus said:Yeah I understand.
The 40 MHz scope will fit my budget. But going for 60 MHz adds 150 euros. Apart from the bandwidth, the sample rate doubles!
Are you sure you prefer the 40 MHz one?
About euros and dollars, I don't understand either. All electronics and other tech items cost the same in dollars than euros. Not the same value, the same number! That is, $600 = 600 euros. For example, videogame consoles. And our salaries are in euros not dollars! Well, in some areas things are not so great here.
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