Looking at using a scope for diagnosing PC hardware, as a way of providing better and more efficient service to my customers and also for hobby use.
Can they be used to determine if a CPU or Motherboard is bad? What else can they test?
In the case of PC motherboard servicing, not much at all, bordering on nothing.
Given current CPU speeds does this mean I would need one with a bandwidth of at least 3.5ghz,and at whatever point in the future when faster clock speeds come out it wont be good for CPU testing? Think this would be a great thing to be able to do but as you can tell I don't know much about them to determine if It would be a feasible option. sure if it could find problems with a BGA slot great but if that means I then need a BGA rework station one thing just leads to another....
As others have pointed out, a scope for testing modern motherboard processor signals is just not feasible, any way you look at it.
And realistically, if you have to ask such a question then it is almost certain that you don't have the very advanced skills needed to accurately probe and interpret such high speed systems to begin with.
The special high speed probes alone will cost many thousands of dollars each, and a 3.5GHz scope CANNOT measure a 3.5GHz digital signal anyway (classic beginners mistake). You could easily spend $50K on such a specced scope and special probes, and it would be next to useless.
An good argument could be made for such testing on very niche and valuable equipment, but general PC hardware - never.
A $50 2nd hand analog scope might be handy for checking basic signals and PSU ripple or something though, and for hobby use you should have one anyway. Or something like a basic Rigol DS1052E digital scope.
Dave.