I'm interested to learn from anyone else making their day-to-day living with a scope. Are these newer models still just plasticky junk, and a "real" scope is still a 5 figure investment? Or have the 'big boys' been caught napping, and are now about to find you can't charge £10k+ for obsolete hardware any more?
Yes, you can get the impression that you don't have to spend a lot of money to get the same result, but that's not always the case.
Cheap and good scopes haven't been around that long either...
I started working in the test field a little over 20 years ago.
That's where I first came into contact with DSOs, before that I only knew analog ones from schools.
I was faced with a mix of DSOs, analog and "hermaphrodites", such as Philips with digital displays on the CRT.
I soon took the DSOs from Tektronix and Lecroy to my heart, at that time a Waverunner LT with 350Mhz and 1GSa/s was the best we had.
The prices were astronomical from a hobbyist's point of view, but the company had only ever bought oscilloscopes when the order situation was good.
Privately, the choice was between Tektronix, Hameg and Philips, all analog scopes that were reasonably affordable second-hand.
In 2006 we bought a cheap Wavesurfer model, it had Windows XP as OS and 200Mhz bandwidth.
Then, in 2009, the first "really cheap", 4 WaveJET scopes, each around 4000€.
They couldn't do anything, but they were small and cheap.
In 2009, someone had also brought a cheap scope from Uni-T, which was a disaster.
I had bought something similar privately and was just as disappointed.
The idea that only expensive branded goods are good remained for the time being.
Then later came various rigol ds1000Zs, which we only used for decoding, because our other scopes couldn't do that.
I also bought one privately and was satisfied at the time because I didn't do that much at home.
But even that couldn't hold a candle to our oldest lecroys, so there was still the idea that only scopes from "A-brands" were the real deal and therefore unattainable for hobbyists in terms of price.
Unless you were lucky and could buy one cheaply second-hand.
Then, almost at the end of the 2010s, two things happened.
The R&S RTB2000 series came out, followed by the Siglent SDS5000X plus.
In retrospect, these were real game changers.
Scopes under 10000€, which were fully usable and definitely gave a "pro feeling".
2020 then the SDS2000Xplus series from siglent...
That was another game changer, albeit rather quietly.
What you get for 1400€ was simply sensational.
I noticed it immediately, as I had been used to working with "Pro" scopes for years.
I would say that for everyday tasks, the scope is in no way inferior to other, much more expensive scopes - that's why we now have 6 of them in the test field.
90% of all conceivable tasks can be done as well with it as with scopes that cost 10x or more.
For the "rest" we now have scopes from lecroy that correspond to the current state of the art.
They have a right to exist, because despite all the enthusiasm about the fact that you can get good quality for (relatively) pocket money, such scopes will never become completely superfluous.
As always, it depends on the task at hand.
A word about bugs:
I only really came into contact with them with the cheap scopes - before that they were foreign to me.
In the meantime, they are also appearing in the "brand scopes", preferably in the cheaper models.
But if they are recognized and confirmed, they are also eliminated, at least at Lecroy and Tektronix.
And at Siglent, so there can no longer be any talk of a "B brand".