[TriEmbed] Fwd: Re: Oscilloscope Question

Robert Gasiorowski rgresume at gmail.com
Sat Apr 11 09:23:06 CDT 2015


Check out Rigol scopes, not that bad if you consider what you get for the price. 
Also, take a look at Analog Discovery from Digilent. Oscilloscope is limited, but logic analyzer and other modules are great, perfect tool for anyone working with embedded systems. 


iPhone OS = OS X on Diet Code

> On Apr 11, 2015, at 3:53 PM, Carl Nobile <carl.nobile at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Just a note. If you want to see digital signals you will need at least 100Meg hertz scope. I doubt that most computer based scopes can do that unless you get an expensive one. I've seen really good prices for very good Tektronix scopes on eBay. Most people feel that Tektronix is the top of the line.
> 
> Carl
>> On Apr 11, 2015 9:45 AM, "vikram sai balaji ulaganathan" <tayirvadai.vikram at gmail.com> wrote:
>> I have seen Raspberry Pi oscilloscope (bitscope interacting with raspberry pi). Also there is an xoscope( a linux based oscilloscope http://xoscope.sourceforge.net/) that uses your soundcard to get the information. But it is limited to the frequency of the sound card).
>> 
>> Bitscope ranged from $160 to $200 (available in newark) while xoscope needs a specific hardware (shield) to filter out any high voltage / current before the sound card.
>> Thanks
>> Vikram
>> 
>>> On Sat, Apr 11, 2015 at 5:10 AM, Scott Hall <scottghall1 at gmail.com> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Give me a chance to dig through old email this weekend, but I posted a message to SplatSpace with a comparison of scopes for the budget minded -- including both those with their own displays and those that your PC for its display.  Most ran in the $300 range.
>>> 
>>> There was also an article last fall in one of electronics magazines I subscribe to.  Let me see what I can find.
>>> 
>>> --sgh
>>> 
>>> > On Apr 10, 2015 9:56 PM, "Dwight Morgan" <dwight.w.morgan at gmail.com> wrote:
>>> >>
>>> >> I’m thinking of getting an oscilloscope or a pc-based device that does that function like the NI MYDAQ. I’m not an electrical engineer, I just want to be able to look at what kind of wave form I’m getting for the small circuits I’m using or planning to use with Arduino and Raspberry Pi. Something with good instructions, ease of use, and inexpensive would be nice.
>>> >>
>>> >>  
>>> >>
>>> >> Any suggestions/comments are appreciated.
>>> >>
>>> >>  
>>> >>
>>> >> Thanks!
>>> >>
>>> >>  
>>> >>
>>> >> Dwight Morgan
>>> >>
>>> >>
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