I've owned an MDO3000 since October and it is NOT buggy -- it's extremely solid.
As I said I don't have one so I haven't seen any bugs myself (but I had the chance to witness the scope locking up for several minutes when doing CPU-intensive stuff, which happened quite a lot during the simple demonstration I've seen). The complaints I heard weren't about stability but silly bugs like issues with the new probe calibration system and serial decode, or only dBm as vertical units in SA mode. Most people I talked also complained about the scope's sluggishness, although it is apparently much better than previous Tek scopes.
By comparison I tried a Siglent SDS2000 and a Rigol DS4000. I found about 10 bugs in just a couple hours on each of those. Sent them back and got the Tek.
Well, that should have been no surprise, considering the long threads on firmware issues with the SDS2000 or DS4000 in this forum. Siglent is still crap at writing software, and Rigol can't be arsed to fix the scope models (DS4000, DS6000) that no-one buys anyways.
I needed a lot of memory as well so I ruled out Agilent. Tek has 10M per channel, all modes (analog + digital). If you need a lot of memory then agilent is a not a good fit. Even a 3000x with 4M upgrade is only 2M/channel in single aquisition mode. Drops to 1M if you use the run/stop. And is further halved if you add the digital channels.
Yes, Keysight should really update the memory configuration on their lower-end DSOX scopes. But I guess we'll see a successor model in the near future anyways.
I wonder why you haven't considered R&S? The HMO3000 offers 8Mpts, 4GSa/s sample rate and good MSO capabilities. It should have been in a similar price range.
The MDO3000 is the best bang for the buck in my opinion if you want for general debug. Networking works well, realtime access through a webrowser (control + real time screen updates).
I guess this depends on what you want and how much you paid, but you're actually the first person I met who's opinion is overwhelmingly positive.
The LeCroy is a rebadged Siglent (or the other way around). It might be great, but I had such bad luck with Siglent SDS2000 I can't recommend anything that shares the same HW or SW.
No, the WaveSurfer 3000 is
*not* a rebadged Siglent. Unlike the cheap-ass WaveAce, the WaveSurfer 3000 has been developed in cooperation with Siglent who also acts as ODM for the hardware (and who has retained the right to sell the scope under their name in China). The software is also developed by LeCroy and not by Siglent, so your fear of issues like with the SDS2000 firmware are unfounded.
This is nothing new btw, LeCroy did the same in the past with other vendors (i.e. Iwatsu, who manufactured the WaveRunner/WaveRunner2/WavePro 900 Series which was developed by LeCroy, and sold them under their own label in Japan).
Also, I've had good luck with Tek support in the U.S. -- might differ in other countries. Also rubbish that this is a scope purchased by managers. It's a mini version of the MDO4000 and it's arguably one of the best scopes for general debug if you ignore the cost.
Well, it's not rubbish that these scopes are mostly bought by managers. I'm working in various corporate environments and in the few occasions where Tek scopes are bought they are so because someone in procurement bought them by basic specs or because they have to buy a certain contingency from them. In the last say 5+ years I've never met an EE who actually preferred a modern-day Tek over any other scope, and due to my work I meet quite a large number of EEs.
And no, the MDO3000 is not just a mini version of the MDO4000. They are completely different designs (i.e. the MDO3k only has four ADCs which is why you can't use the SA at the same time as the scope; the MDO4k has eight).
And cost is the major issue that MDO3000 solves. High end LeCroy's are nice but I'm very dubious of their low end offerings (3000 series included) until I can take one for a test drive. I certainly would not blindly by any scope just because it has a LeCroy name.
I wouldn't buy *any* scope (aside from a really cheap entry level scope like the DS1000z maybe) that I can't test beforehand. No matter who makes it.
We have more broken LeCroy's in our lab than any other scope ( might be why they need to service for 7yrs).
Interesting. Can you elaborate? What scopes are these, and why are they broken? I know that some of the old W2k-based units (WR6k, WP7k, WM8k) had some driver issues but that was in the beginning and has been fixed long since. The also was an issue with the acquisition board connectors on the WaveSurfer 400 and early units of the WaveRunner Xi, but both have been fixed by LeCroy. So I'm curious to hear what problems you had.
Biggest complaint I hear about tek is it's an old and slow architecture. But it gives you 20x the memory of the Agilent on all channels and only slows down in corner cases when performing math intensive operations. As do all high end scopes.
Not really, at least not to the same extent.
Try doing an I2C decode / zoom / search on a Lecroy with 32M memory -- it takes minutes.
No, it doesn't. Decoding I2C or searching on a sequence on a WavePro 7300A with 48Mpts takes several seconds and feels slow like hell, but not minutes. And this scope is now over 6 years old and uses a slow P4 processor with single PCI bus. It's much faster on a modern scope with a fast CPU and PCIe.
If it takes several minutes on your LeCroy scope (I guess a WavePro 7k or WaveMaster 8k?) then there's something that needs addressing, i.e. an old X-Stream software or a weak CPU. I guess you're running the scope with basic config (i.e. 256MB RAM and 1.3GHz Celeron)?
This aside, you can always increase the speed by lowering the memory to say 10Mpts and the sample rate to 2.5GSa/s (or what the equivalent rate is the MDO3k uses at the required timebase).