This conversation started as a question regarding the Rigol MSO5074 and was meant to focus on that scope. For that reason I didn't comment on, although I noted, some of the points made about the Siglent scopes early on in the thread. However, the recent Black Friday deal on the SDS2104X Plus had me wondering whether it might be worthwhile to stretch my budget bit. If I were going to do so, this warranted a more in-depth consideration of the scope and so after some fact finding and resulting questions, I ended up bringing the SDS2104X Plus into the conversation. However, I am almost regretting having done so! Still, doing so has provided me with an opportunity to learn a bit more.
I have even been looking at the manual, and can see why the term 'Zoom' actually means something different on the SDS2104X Plus to what might be considered the conventional meaning of viewing data either side of that displayed on the screen. I am, however, still struggling with the concept of History on the Siglent and what its purpose is? It seems that this since this records a history of captured frames, it ought to display the data that is before or after the current frame, hence something akin to a conventional 'zoom' in effect, but I am not sure? I do find it difficult to accept that the reason why the conventional form of 'zoom' and auto memory depth selection were omitted was for performance reasons of because one might run out of memory buffer space. I also find it incomprehensible that Siglent could not implement a conventional auto and manual memory depth control, utilizing up to the full 200Mpt memory depth when history is turned off. It has been done on other scopes and clearly can be done even if only to provide the user with a choice of how they want to operate. Omitting this feature therefore seems to have the appearance of a philosophical/conceptual rather than engineering design decision. That being said, maybe there are engineering or hardware considerations that have influenced the design. Trying to filter out the facts has not been easy, but regardless of who is right and who is wrong, or the advantages and disadvantages, it is what it is and one has to figure out whether one will be happy with learning to work in a different way to what one previously might have been used to. I have no objection to learning new ways of doing things and possibly this issue has been exaggerated, but this has certainly given me pause for thought. I only wish I could see it in actual operation in some online demo. I did actually look for one that might show and explain this aspect but so far haven't found one.
Since there really is no comparable alternative other than the MSO5074 in this price range, the choice seems to boil down to the MSO5074 with its noisy front end, slightly darker screen, less polished UI and unclear channel lights but with a familiar way of working, or stretching the budget a bit to the SDS2000X Plus, which is generally considered to be the better scope, but learn new ways of working and accept that it comes with bandwidth limited probes at this price point. In addition, it appears that the only available and viable LA probe for the Siglent is the official probe that currently comes as part of the bundle deal. Regardless of how good a deal that bundle might be at the moment, the fact is, that by comparison, the Rigol comes with the LA and Sig Gen functions already enabled. Although their 'official' LA probe is expensive, there is a viable and affordable third party alternative.
While I have been seriously considering the SDS2104X Plus for the last couple of days, I feel the pendulum beginning to swing back towards the MSO5074...