Thanks for the guidance , we have been looking at those links/posts and the new sds1102cml+ does sound good and importantly, the comments on reliablilty /build quality of the Siglents scopes does seem to be universal.
The biggest problem for us is that neither of us has any practical experience of modern DSOs , just the old analogues, so we can read about such modern features and specs but cannot fully appreciate them.
I fully understand the "new world" that confronts you, but be assured the experience you have with CRO's will stand you in good stead. Just knowing what to expect on the display is an overlooked bonus and subconscious sanity check that scope newbies just don't have.
Operation procedures are much the same except for more advanced use, you don't have a dual timebase as such but a Zoom, normally as a split-screen on the display. Trigger types are within menus and even basic DSO's offer more than CRO's and some have user definable parameters. Single shot and Normal triggering and especially when used in conjunction with definable Trigger settings are IMO the most powerful tools in a DSO.
You will battle with new measurement methodologies until you get a handle on the different UI of a DSO, some say it's harder to change from a CRO but when I did I never went back, DSO's are just so much more powerful. It does help to Tee a DUT connection and input into both for a very short while until you are comfortable with a DSO UI but that won't last for long.
DSO's do take a little more "driving" but really that's a result of their greater feature set. Learn it, use it.
One thing that you may find disconcerting after CRO's is DSO trace thickness, you may have noticed it in the many DSO screen shots in various posts/threads. This is something one needs to understand, even overlook or ignore to some degree and Dave did a couple of good vids on this well known phenomenon.
Search for "why do DSO's appear to be noisey". (part 1 and 2)
While Davy and the forum nearly always go for the new Rigol 1054Z at 50mhz with the bigger memory and higher price, could you spare a few moments to say how the new 1102CML + compares against the 1054Z; just a simple comment about any key differences between them that you think we beginners might miss.
Where to start......
Functionally the new SDS1k**L+ models are no different to the earlier versions, still a rock solid basic DSO and serves owners well that know how to use them to their potential.
IF your needs are or will be more advanced in the future neither are "quite" the right choice.
Both scopes have the same but different sampling rates with 1 (full) or 2 (halved) channels used, meaning the "data points" captured and then used in the interpolation algorithms for "accurate" waveform reconstruction. When more than 2 channels are used with a 1054 sampling rate falls to 1/4 of the full rate and far less data points remain for accurate waveform reconstruction.
Most other differences are overly apparent with study of each datasheet excepting the ongoing threads of problems with measurements and infrequency of FW updates for the 1054.
By small comparison the last FW update for the SDS1k**L series was 1 year ago, they've not been needed.
Then there are threads of bricked Siglents or their rebadges where users have installed the wrong FW for the HW version.
There's one more thread you would need to read before you have the full picture of comparison of HW and FW between these 2 models.
Search the forum for Yaigol.
Others will no doubt have more to add, threads such as this usually turn into a scope pissing contest, mine's better than yours....etc.
Now I wonder how this thread will go.......