For DS1000Z:
Offset Range (Probe ratio is 1X)
1 mV/div to 499 mV/div: ±2 V
500 mV/div to 10 V/div: ±100 V
As far as I could see, DougM wants to look at part of 40V P-P signal at better than 1V/DIV or less..
No digital scope I know of will have dynamic reserve of 200x of full screen sensitivity... And probably only +-8 to 10 DIVS...
If A/D converter full scale input for instance is 2V, so on 100mV/DIV input, your scope full dynamic range is +- 5 DIVS. DC offset will be only helpful if you have 100 mV AC riding on top of 12V offset, so you dial in offset in opposite direction to "pull it back" to screen.. Or you AC couple it..
If you have 40 V AC P-P, you need 40V dynamic range signal path for it all to fit in. Without mentioning amplification.. That is with unity gain.
I don't know of any digital scope that can do it. If someone know one I would like to learn about it. It would be good info.
Also, no matter how quick they recover from overload, it ain't pretty...
I believe David Hess mentioned sampling scopes (old analog diode bridge types) in other thread.
Diode bridge sampling scope are direct sampling devices. They don't have input amplifiers and are basically S/H circuit that is disconnected from input all the time, except at the very short time of sample window (aperture). By choosing time at which to sample and if needed adding DC offset, you can look at any part of waveform with no problem of overshoot.
They are repetitive sample devices (random or sequential) and are useful only for repetitive and stable signals..
Modern approach to more detail on digital scopes is hi res scopes (more than 8 bit), keeping signal within dynamic range, and zoom in in software.. 12bit scope will have 4x more detail (pixels) in vertical than 8 bit... But, it costs money...
Regards
Sinisa