The biggest advantage of a DSO is the single shot capability, something which is invaluable, at least to me. I wouldn't worry about the Auto button on a DSO. Saying "learn how to do it manually" is enough for any adult, we're not talking about raisin children here ("you can have one when you're older and have learned responsibility"). Buying an analog oscilloscope when what he probably wants in the end seems a bit like a waste of money even though analog oscilloscopes are good to have around.
Regarding the Rigol, it seems to me like it is _the_ hobbyist/low end scope. It seems to be what is recommended pretty much everywhere. I have one and I like it very much (though, admittedly, I don't have much to compare it with except old Tek scopes from university which certainly beats on interface and features at least). The interface is easy to understand an it has all the features I need although higher bandwidth is always nice, of course. The build quality seems excellent though I haven't drop tested it of course ;
In the interest of full disclosure, I'm one of those "young whippersnappers" (as Dave would put it) who has never owned an analog oscilloscope but I still never use the auto button. The auo button simply doesn't give you what you want most of the time. Learning how to operate scales and positions is something you can learn in quickly anyway, it's very simple.
Fair comment!
In turn,I'm an OF who has never owned a digital oscilloscope.I have used some of the earlier Tek & HP ones,& was sorely disappointed by their poor performance at the time.
Obviously the performance has improved radically since then!
I usually use oscilloscope to fault find in a piece of equipment ,signal,dc supplies & all,with the DMM only occasionally being necessary,
An analog 'scope in "free run" mode & dc coupled is very useful to do this,as you can check various points through the equipment,without needing an extremely accurate indication,just--Is what's supposed to be there present? Is something present that shouldn't be?
If you find,say a hum signal on your dc,you can then trigger on it to check it more closely.
On the digital'scopes I've used,there doesn't seem to be an equivalent to "free -running" an analog."Auto" doesn't hack it!
I'm not saying,you can't use a digital to trace faults,it's just that to me,it's clunkier!
My feeling is that using a digital is much more structured,as you tend to look at signals you already know the characteristics of,rather than use the more "free wheeling" method that is common with a analog.
Perhaps for EEs this fits their requirements just as well,or better.
VK6ZGO