[TriEmbed] Fwd: Re: Oscilloscope Question

Manish Arora openmeddev at gmail.com
Sat Apr 11 09:53:48 CDT 2015


My limited experience with red pitaya is pity decent - two channel input
(125MHz) and two channel output & oshw, controlled over Ethernet and
under   500 usd (rs components). www.redpitya.com
 On 11 Apr 2015 19:23, "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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>>
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