I have been using the ASA100 for a few months now and I really like it. I do repairs on (farm) equipment semi professionally.
I first used a Hameg 6042 curve tracer (i started to use it in circuit more and more), which kept having problems with the CRT. A good tool but I was looking for something more reliable.
I use the ASA100 with and without a “ golden” measurement. For example when I have a device with multiple outputs I can very easily compare them to each other using one as a golden.
I also use it like most people use the diode check mode on their multimeter to find broken semi-conductors in circuit. The advance of using a curve tracer or ASA is that you get way more information. For example is the behavior capacitive / inductive / resistive / diode like.
Also you can adjust the voltage, source resistance and frequency. This is a very use full feature because when you want to test for example a output of a mobile PLC, you can set the voltage high and the source resistance and frequency low because there is a lot of capacitance at the output, but this way you still get a nice look at the impedance of the output, this way you get to check if maybe a TVS diode is gone or a high side power switch.
In another case I had a device of which the MCU kept resetting. Then you set a maximum of 5V and a high source resistance. In my case I could find a very leaky (almost shorted) multilayer capacitor.
Also used the ASA on a machine with can bus problems. Turned out to be a bad temperature sensor module. With the ASA I took a signature off the can bus connections and found the temperature module to be very asymmetrical. It was a potted module so further investigation was not possible. But we replaced the module and the problems seemed to have disappeared ever since.
If you know what circuit you are probing you can work out if the curve you are getting on the screen is to be expected. I learned this mostly from a whitepaper by Huntron.
https://huntron.com/sales-support/pdf/ASA-paper-extract.pdfFor suspect desoldered components it is a handy device to check if they are broken. This can save a lot of time in ordering and waiting for components. Although I must say for igbt’s (which I get a lot off) I still use the Hameg because I really need some gate driving on the higher voltage ones.
I do use it via a powered usb hub and that powered hub is connected to the computer via a usb opto isolator. Because I am powering the devices under test on and off all the time. And i do not want to fry my computer when i forget to turn the DUT off.