Hello everyone,
Just joined up.
I came across this thread looking for info on the Hantek DSO5202B which I subsequently purchased from an ebay seller.
The CRO works really well but I have struck a few issues with this CRO which I wonder if other people have found. I have sent this info off to Hantek but have not heard back from them. The firmware installed is later than what is on the website.
For instance, AC coupling of the input channels inserts a high pass filter that peaks at 100 Hz and rolls off below that. So when you display a 100 Hz sinewave and switch from DC to AC coupling the signal amplitude actually increases !! Ideally the AC coupling should be flat down to 10Hz and roll off below that without any peaking otherwise this is causing an error in the readings.
Also frequency measurement on the bottom of the screen does not correlate with the menu because the bottom screen measurement decimal places are always zero. ie frequency shown in measurement menu is 105.3Hz and frequency shown at the bottom of the screen is 105.00 Hz.
regards
I test with HW7 DSO5102B (in this case very same as 5202B)
AC mode (Why?)
If compare to 1kHz sine signal level (set in calculations as 0dB reference)
Measured directly without probe.
Including old Wavetek flatness errors (yes but this my Wavetek is carefully adjusted so that it is surprising flat level - error is significantly below +-0.1dB in this area)
CH1, AC, 500mV/div
signal level 6div p-p @ 0dB
-6dB 10Hz
-3dB 17Hz
0dB 41Hz
+1dB 80Hz
0dB 350Hz - 1kHz
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About frequency counter.
Measure menu freq are _calculated_ from ADC captured data.
With low freq it may sometimes be better and more accurate than HW counter. Specially if use averaging.
HW counter work totally different. It counts events in trig line. It is event counter. It counts how many events in time window.
Becouse it is not as modern real timeintervall counters it resolution is highly dsependent about time window setting for counting. How long is gate open window what time it use for counting these pulses. (yes it is just pulse counter. Totally different as modern frequency calculating time interval counters as something like cheap HP53131 or similars. They can solve 9-10 or more decimals in one second.)
How many seconds need count if you want count 50Hz signal frequency with 1 or 0.1mHz resolution (mHz is milli Hz) if use simple pulsecounter type frequency counter. I think no one want waiting.
But this win clearly measure menu freq display if we go more high frequencies.
If you have 999999Hz you have one Hz resolution and counting time is something like 1s.
It give lot of more accuracy with HF signals.
As understand this you can thing which one you look in which case. (yes with low freq it is maybe clever if Hantek shut off these zeroes if they are not meaningfull.
Also it can read in specs (exept that +-30ppm is lie.. maybe they still do not know how to make tests for specs and what are normal "good" rules for specifications.:
(
I will write it +-150ppm over temp area and including aging. If can not get any other info There meybe need write lifetime aging drift becouse it have NO adjustment! )
maybe they need write this littlebit more clear so that peoples undertand better how it works and what are limits.
It is pure pulse counter. It "blind" open and close gate and count pulses what come as gate is open. gate time is 1s.
(but if there is example 50Hz, why it do not shut off all zeroes after decimal point. FW bug?
User manual (rev.9)specs
Readout Resolution 6 digits
Accuracy (typical)
±30ppm (including all frequency reference errors and ±1 count
errors)
Frequency Range AC coupled, from 4Hz minimum to rated bandwidth
Signal Source
Pulse Width or Edge Trigger modes: all available trigger sources
_The Frequency Counter measures trigger source at all times,
including when the oscilloscope acquisition pauses due to changes
in the run status, or acquisition of a single shot event has
completed._
Pulse Width Trigger mode: The oscilloscope counts pulses of
significant magnitude inside the _1s measurement window_ that
qualify as triggerable events, such as narrow pulses in a PWM
pulse train if set to < mode and the width is set to a relatively small
time.
Edge Trigger mode: The oscilloscope counts all edges of sufficient
magnitude and correct polarity.
Video Trigger mode: The Frequency Counter does not work