For my current need which is audio applications (specifically guitar pedals and pre-amps) sounds like the "Analog Discovery 2" looks better for me.
But it is $279 and I still need to use my computer.
In the other hand, the Rigol DS1054Z is $399 (just $120 more) and it is a full independent DSO, and can be used with my computer too, right?
My new questions are:
1) How much more precise and better the Analog Discovery is compared to the 1054Z? And how much flexible it can be for all other applications that the 1054Z can provide me?
2) I can see in the future having both units, but for a beginner like me that I will be learning basic components like opamps or basic transistor circuits, which on will be better to start with?
Thanks!
The AD has a 14 bit A/D converter versus 8 bits for most scopes including the DS1054Z. That's a HUGE difference in resolution! The DS1054Z will have a higher bandwidth and 4 channels but, in my view, 4 channels are better used in the digital domain and the AD has 16 bits of digital IO. That means I get the full SPI transaction with 12 channels left over versus using all 4 channels of the DS1054Z.
The AD is perfect at the frequencies most used with op amps and transistor circuits. I was fooling around with some transistor logic circuits the other day using the digital IO but then I turned around and built up a properly biased Class A transistor amplifier which I looked at with the Network tool of the AD. You just can't do that with the DS1054Z.
I would highly recommend starting with the AD because it is a pretty complete electronics lab in a hand held box. In my work area, I have several computer workstations. No reason, really, but I'm never more than 3' away from a computer. I haven't done it but I could certainly justify using LTspice to model a circuit and the AD to see how it really works.
Having the two arbitrary waveform generators, something the DS1054Z doesn't have, is perfect for providing signals to breadboard circuits. Usually the waveform will be a simple sine wave but there are square, ramps, triangle and a few others plus you can invent your own.
I could see a college student buying one of these gadgets and using it throughout the EE program. Add in a laptop with LTspice and Maxma (wxMaxima) and I think you have everything necessary to do the work. OK, I would add Eclipse (the IDE) and GNU Fortran but that's just me...
I think the BNC adapter board is a necessary add-on:
http://store.digilentinc.com/bnc-adapter-board-for-the-analog-discovery/As are two scope probes (maybe 4 if you want to use probes to inject signals):
http://store.digilentinc.com/bnc-oscilloscope-x1-x10-probes-pair/Those can probably wait because, more often than not, I just use pin headers on the solderless breadboard and connect the signals with the flyleads on the header that comes with the AD.
I like the gadget a lot! Nevertheless, it isn't my money and it isn't my decision. I have both the AD and a DS1054Z plus there is a Tek 485 under the table. I bought the AD years before I bought the DS1054Z and, to be honest, I only bought the scope because I wanted to see how they worked. I could very well have just used the AD for the lower frequency stuff and the 485 for everything else - which is exactly what I did for quite a long time.
Download the software and play around with the Demo device. Read the specs, see the tutorials, learn all you can about the gadget before you spend your money. All in, the AD plus attachments will cost just about as much as the DS1054Z. And you might consider the box of analog parts that go with the AD
http://store.digilentinc.com/analog-parts-kit-by-analog-devices-companion-parts-kit-for-the-analog-discovery/