Just found this thread - some responses below, and happy to answer any other questions you might have!
All EU orders ship for free with duties paid by us (DDP). The price shown is VAT-inclusive and will be the total cost to you.
The 6 GHz bandwidth of the GigaWave will give accurate results up to ~3 Gbaud. Your 2.5 Gbps LVDS is fine by this metric.
If your 3000€ budget is strict, the GigaWave is the only option with sufficient bandwidth, outside of the used market.
I am a bit concerned that the inputs are only +-1V, so nearly every signal that I have in my line of work (CML, LVDS, (P)ECL)....) has to be attenuated to look at it
I would think the signals would be attenuated by your choice of probes. If you needed to look at the trigger's edge, you have a 6dB loss from the splitter as well. You could check out Lasmux's thread on their active probe as well.
Yes, usually your probe will provide more than enough attenuation.
Keep in mind that every scope with a selection of input ranges is simply swapping out amplifiers/attenuators into a fixed-range frontend. The ±1V rating is an inconvenience but does not limit the range of applications - you just need some SMA inline attenuators on hand.
More of an issue is having too much attenuation - a 350 mVPP swing into a 20x probe will result in an 18 mVPP eye diagram. Relative to the 1 mV RMS noise floor of the instrument, you may run into dynamic range issues. If you can tolerate the loading, a 1:5 or 1:10 Z0 probe will work better.
Due to the principle of operation (single comparator), the fidelity of the instrument is limited to ~1e-4 BER within the open eye. For tuning equalizers/isolators, you will be able to optimize the overall shape of the eye. This may be enough to fix your SI problem if your error tails are normally distributed, but you won't be able to catch long tails in the distribution. (Of course, the only way to be sure is to tweak your system and see if the problem goes away.)
I have one very basic question: Is the Gigawave the right tool for looking into high speed digital signals? I'm not only thinking about LVDS, but also USB 3.x, Gigabit Ethernet etc. I have often situations where I need to tune transmission lines, very long or non-ideal cables and linear redrivers and each time I have to go back to the HF lab at my old university to use the nice, but absolutely non portable and expensive 40GSPS LeCroy WaveRunner.
Given that you have access to a 40 GS/s WaveRunner, the GigaWave could be a convenient tool to "catch" most of your day-to-day needs. In your situation, it doesn't need to do everything - it just needs to do enough to cut down on your trips to the HF lab. USB 3.x @ 5 Gbaud is a bit too fast for accurate results on the GigaWave, but Gigabit Ethernet should work fine.