Oscilloscope

XooP

New member
I have tossed out my old 1970's Oscilloscope because it took up a lot of space on my desk. I'm now looking for a new one. Any suggestion on what to buy? Don't want to spend more than I need :)
 

XooP

New member
Thank you, but if you could get away with a multimeter, how do you check for clock signals?
 

localpcshop

New member
lol, I dont!, hence being on this forum

But i believe my guys use the fluke 87 which has a frequency Counter -If thats what you mean!
 
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aprendiz

Moderator
I use a Tektronix TDS3032B and I've never measured more than 25Mhz, so, Rigol 50Mhz + software update will be enough
 

Wingspinner

New member
I really love the 2000's vintage Fluke Scopemeters, especially the color display models they come in 60MHz, 100MHz, and 200MHz models and color or b/w but it turns out the only difference is the firmware and someone with the right equipment to do the equivalent of a "factory" firmware upgrade can convert a 60 to a 200MHz for around $200 (the firmware upgrade is only $85 but it must be fully recalibrated. I've had ScopeMeter Repairs do a couple for me (no affiliation other than a satisfied customer) . You can get a really nice color 2 channel 200mhz calibrated with all accessories for $1200-$1400 or a b/w one for $700-$800 on ebay. Less with less accessories. If you can get by with one channel, you can find them for a couple of hundred with a bad channel for pretty cheap relative to the new price. They are a bit pricey but excellent, accurate, units. The b/w units are every bit as good as the color units but not as sexy.
 
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dukefawks

Administrator
You'll probably never use it for that. Measuring higher frequencies also runs in to many termination/impedance and ground loop issues that make the displayed measurement garbage unless you know EXACTLY what you are doing. A 100MHz scope is fine for everything you will do with it.
 

shanenin

Member
You'll probably never use it for that. Measuring higher frequencies also runs in to many termination/impedance and ground loop issues that make the displayed measurement garbage unless you know EXACTLY what you are doing. A 100MHz scope is fine for everything you will do with it.

I see the 100mhz are more expensive than the 50mhz. Would it be worth the extra investment to get the 100mhz?
 
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