Isn't ground just a reference point .. and reference could be +v, -v .. etc !!
Or am I mixing Voltmeter and Oscilloscope!
I wonder how some multi-channel oscilloscope is *really* helpful if we can't see waveforms in reference (ground) to two different points in a circuit.
lets say I want to see waveform across two different components of the circuit !!
Isn't oscilloscope not more than a device which shows voltage (and off course showing other parameters... vpp,freq,etc) in the form of a graph !!
The ground on an oscilloscope is not just a reference point, it is hard wired to the ground pin on the power connector on the back.
Now if the circuit you are testing is totally floating, then in theory you can connect the ground anywhere.
But if the circuit you are testing is also connected to earth ground, or it connects via cables to other grounded devices, then you can only connect ground to ground.
Now most of the time you get perfectly useful waveforms in spite of this.
When you do need to see the waveform across a component, you can use the scope in differential mode, where channel 2 is inverted, and the two channels are added together. This means the scope only shows the difference. The Rigol can do this, but you have to be careful that a channel is not limiting, or that the difference is not so small that there are inadequate bits of resolution to be useful.
Better still, differential probes are available designed for just this job. these perform much better then subtracting the channels. Unfortunately they are not cheap. They usually cost much more then the Rigol scope.
Richard