Thanks to all for the good input!!!
I know sometimes giving a probe of 2kUSD to a student sounds crazy but we have good students
and if you are designing a power supIply a current probe with a bandwidth of 100kHz ... it is like measuring DC...
What i like of the probe RP1002C is that it uses a simple ac-adapter as power supply, so actually very cheap.
When I saw the prices of the dedicated power supplies for more professional probes (20+MHz) i wondered why they are so expensive. Most of the time the voltage tolerance is 12V+-0.5V with a current of about 0.5A or a bit more. In theory you could design a very simple power supply, and if you want even linear, that would match the specifications.
Of course I guess finding the connector it is a real challenge
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Definely the ucurrent project it is a bit too low... we usually range easily up to 30A.
In my previous job i used Tektronix MSO 4000 series and now LeCroy, both they have current probes up to 150A that they do not require external power supply but of course u can you them only with their scopes.
I understand having a power supply for powering the current probes and differential probes but it cannot be as big as the oscilloscope!!! -_-
We have some Rogowski coils for measuring ac-current up to 20MHz, they are just great (battery+ac-adapter), just missing dc...
I think I will have a look at the Fluke current probes, definitely interesting.