I've been interested in portable power stations of late and have a few of them. I want to test how clean they are for computers and other sensitive electronics. Specifically, I want to measure transfer time from mains to inverter, frequency, voltage, any sort of distortion.
In my research I found that I need to get a ground isolated oscilloscope (battery operated) and a high voltage differential probe. Using an attenuator alone is risky as I cannot trust that a power station has ground and/or neutral wired correctly.
I've been considering getting an OWON HDS2202S and a Micsig DP10013 (now DP1500).
Thing is that the Micsig has a 50x and 500x attenuation factor. The OWON supports 1x, 10x, 100x, 1000x, and 10000x. Everything I read says it doesn't support a custom factor.
So if I start measuring 120VAC am I correct to assume I'll see 60VAC on the OWON if I set it to 100x and the Micsig at 50x? Is there any way for this scope to use a custom factor?
Micsig also produces the DP3000 which has a 100x and 1000x factor but it's a lot more expensive and apparently more noisy. The discontinued DP10007 has 10x and 100x factors but it likely is hard to find.
I've also been looking at benchtop scopes like the Siglent SDS1202X-E but I'm not a fan of its size nor its grounding.
Capturing the transfer (power loss) is also tricky it appears depending on the scope. I see people using low voltage DC adapters that they feed into a second channel to capture the exact moment when the cut occurs. Is there a cleaner way?
Is there another portable battery powered scope and differential probe combo that would be a good fit for me?