Basic oscilloscope recommendations

I need to buy a 4-channel oscilloscope and am hoping someone can suggestion what make/model might be suitable. I only require about

10MHz bandwidth for the transient signal, and it repeats every 0.1 to 10 seconds.

From a little experience using an old analog scope, the signal fades

out really quickly whereas I'd like it to stay on screen until the next trigger. I was thinking an LCD screen might be the solution to that problem? Does that necessitate a digitial scope?

From looking on google, the Tecktronix TDS2004B seems to fit. But

really I don't need anything fancy, like FFT or USB storage. I just want 4-channels and a persistent trace on the screen. And 50 ohm input impedence.

Can anyone point me in the right direction? Thanks.

Reply to
spasmous2
Loading thread data ...

Take a look at the Hameg scopes. They sell excellent product without the fancy gadgets for a fair price.

Reply to
KC

Yes, you need digital storage. Never, ever buy a scope with a bandwidth less than 100MHz. Requirements change. You ALWAYS need more bandwidth than you anticipated. For slow signals, memory depth is an important parameter. Draw the waveform you want to look at. Put dots on it representing samples close enough together so you can see what you want to see. Figure out the time between samples. Then count how many of those samples will be needed to cover the area of interest. If you expect to see 10 MHz. bandwidth stuff over a whole 10 second interval, you're gonna need a LOT of memory depth...times 4. If you can't afford the memory, you're gonna need delayed triggering or some other means to see what you want to see.

You haven't disclosed the nature of the waveforms you want to see, but what you have said indicates that your situation may require far more than "basic oscilloscope" features.

Don't skimp on a scope. It's your best tool for a lot of design/debug situations. Requirements change, and waveforms are NOT slowing down. mike

--
Return address is VALID!
Bunch-O-Stuff Forsale Here:
http://mike.liveline.de/sale.html
Reply to
mike

Do you really think memory depth is all that important? When you can just hook up a DSO to your PC via USB or RS232 and record the waveform for as long as you need, save it in a wmv file and review at your leisure. Or am I missing something?

I agree.

Reply to
Hammy

Only if you want high resolution for a long time. Do the math. Acquisition time divided by the time between samples equals the memory depth requirement. Yes, there are different techniques, but not typically found on entry-level scopes.

When you can

YOUbetcha! IFF your DSO has the capability to spit out real-time data. AND your PC has the port and the capture software and the I/O bandwidth to acquire the data. And if you have the software to transform it into wmv, although I don't know why you'd want that. Remember, we're talking 10MHz. analog scope bandwidth here. Or am I missing something? yes

--
Return address is VALID!
Bunch-O-Stuff Forsale Here:
http://mike.liveline.de/sale.html
Reply to
mike

Thanks mike for your thoughts. Digital scopes seem to start around $2000, which is steeper than I was hoping. On ebay there are many analog scopes that are high quality for much less than this.

I would get an analog but I just don't know if the screen persistence is adequate. The signal I am looking at is around 20ms duration and repeats every second or so, so the update of the screen would be very slow on an analog scope. I really want the trace to stay on the screen until the next trigger. Can analog scopes accomodate this?

Reply to
spasmous2

sure it will not... you can get quite cheaps digital scopes on ebay too... but for that job you sure need a digital scope.

--
Jean-Yves.
Reply to
Jean-Yves

I am a little confused about digital storage oscilloscopes. I have seen some DSO's that appear to have an analog screen (eg.

formatting link
whereas others are obviously digital because of the LCD color display (eg.
formatting link

I may be just mixed up, but can the first model (Tektronix 2430A) acquire a 20ms transient, then hold it on the screen until the next trigger, which may be a second later - or even hold it on the screen indefinitely?

Reply to
spasmous2

I haven't been following the entire thread, but hopefully I won't get flamed for breaking in here. I understand that you're looking for a 4-channel scope. Don't know if this is an absolute requirement, but if you can get by with a 2-channel scope, an analog storage scope is certainly usable at the time intervals you describe. They have several storage modes; one is a timed storage, where the trace is reset after a preset elapsed time, or triggered reset, where the trace stays on the screen until the next sweep trigger. The brightness is quite good, especially on slow sweep speeds. If you want to try a cheapie to begin, I recommend that you look at Ebay for a Tektronix storage scope. The model 265 scopes were a staple in their day, and there are lots of them on Ebay, usually in the $200-$300 range. If you can find one that the seller will verify that it is a working scope, they can be a bargain. On the other hand, they are obsolete, no longer supported by Tektronix, and some parts are hard to find.

There are other Tektronix models of analog storage scopes on the market, usually for reasonable prices.

--
Dave M
MasonDG44 at comcast dot net  (Just substitute the appropriate characters in the 
address)

Life is like a roll of toilet paper; the closer to the end, the faster it goes.
Reply to
DaveM

The absolutely positively most important thing is to define with precision what you want your scope to do. Your current definition I interpret to take about 3 orders of magnitude less memory depth than my interpretation of your original requirement.

How much of the signal do you need to see on the screen at one time from one acquisition? And how fine a detail do you need to see when you magnify it? That determines what you need from a digital scope.

Second thing to worry about is how much your time is worth. If you make money with your time, and your time gets $100 an hour, your break-even point is 20 hours. That's a no-brainer. If lack of measurement delays a project, it's mismanagement. A system that's difficult to use on an occasional problem is frustrating. A system that won't easily do your primary requirement is EXPENSIVE. Stated another way, look at the life-cycle costs of the project, not just the $$$ spent on a scope.

If it's a hobby, that's another story. Hobbies are DESIGNED to waste your time. It's their job... With a hobby, you might have more fun trying to squint at a flashing display. Heck, I once built a spot welder. Was trying to look at the current waveform on an analog scope. I went as far as hooking a usb webcam up to the trigger-out on my scope and captured the trace afterglow on the computer. I had great fun for several months messing around with it. Then a digital scope fell into my lap and I had the welder problem solved in a matter of a few minutes. Bummer...I had to find something else to waste my time.

My favorite scope is a TEK TDS500 series. Mostly because people give them away dead. All you gotta do for most of them is wash the boards and replace 140 electrolytic caps.

Analog storage scopes can be interesting if you get them VERY cheap. I'd avoid 'em. mike

--
Return address is VALID!
Bunch-O-Stuff Forsale Here:
http://mike.liveline.de/sale.html
Reply to
mike

I apologize for being unclear, I am trying to be as precise as I can! The signal I expect is around 10-20 ms duration. It repeats every 1 second (approximately) but I only care about the first 10-20 ms. I want around 2us resolution but probably 10us is more than adequate. The scope will sit in a corner and display these types of waveforms for the rest of its life and nothing else.

I will look at the waveforms - but hopefully not for the rest of my life ;) My viewing pleasure is paramount in this purchase - I would like the 10-20ms of interest to be displayed brightly for 1 second, or longer if necessary, until the next 10-20 ms of interest comes along.

My current (analog) scope triggers and shows the 10-20 ms but then goes dark for the remaining 980-990 ms.

Reply to
spasmous2

"

Then maybe you should be looking at transient recorders. Heres just one combo dso Transient recorder.

formatting link

Reply to
Hammy

the 2430 will do that.

--
Jean-Yves.
Reply to
Jean-Yves

50 ohm impedence?! Is this a typo? Oscilloscopes are designed to have high input impedence on the order of mega ohms so as not to disturb the circuit being monitored.
Reply to
peter

my high end fluke combiscope has a 1Mohm input impedance .. and a special button for a 50 ohm impedance... I dont know what this is for but as it is a special feature of a high end scope it must be usefull for something...

--
Jean-Yves.
Reply to
Jean-Yves

It's done for signal quality. Active probes are designed to work into

50 ohms.
--
Return address is VALID!
Bunch-O-Stuff Forsale Here:
http://mike.liveline.de/sale.html
Reply to
mike

Jean-Yves wrote in news:no_pub_for snipped-for-privacy@news.aioe.org:

above 250Mhz,scopes often have 50 ohm terminations. TEK 485 and 2445/65 series have switchable 1M/50ohm input Z. TEK 7A24,7A19,and 7A29 7K plug-ins all have only 50 ohm input Z.

Some active FET probes require a 50 ohm termination,and the TEK AM503/A6302 current probe system needs one,too.

--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
kua.net
Reply to
Jim Yanik

my scope has a 50 ohm input option on it.. other than that, it's a 1 meg input.

--
"I'm never wrong, once i thought i was, but was mistaken"
Real Programmers Do things like this.
http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5
Reply to
Jamie

ElectronDepot website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.