I'm in need of oscilloscope with 50 ohm input impedance on the vertical channels.
If this is obviously easy, then why (other than convenience) would my HP 1725A (for example) have 50 ohm input impedance selection?
Does it? My HP1740A and Tek 2465 and most other scopes don't. OTOH unusually my Tek 485 does. The key difference is the Tek 485 has
two internal attenuators, one the usual 1Mohm, the other 50ohm.
If you have a 1Mohm//20pF input and you add a 50ohm attenuator (either through or T), then you will have a 50ohm//20pF input. That will lead (pun intended) to a reflection from a 50ohm source.
Given the OP's moniker, I suspect they are a radio amateur, so they will understand the relationships between frequency, VSWR and cable length. Whether that matters to the OP is a case for them to determine.
The VSWR problem can be ameliorated in the standard fashion: use an inline attenuator so that you have source->lead->attenuator->50ohm->1Mohm//20pF. The higher the attenuation factor, the smaller the effect of the 20pF.
Here's a few
quick and dirty experiments on my Tek485. For all pictures, horizontal 10Hz-400MHz 50MHz/div, yellow is a Smith chart of the reflection, blue is the return loss 10dB/div with the blue tick indicating 0dB.
The first is the Tek 485's usual 1Mohm//20pF input. The return loss is dismal: 0dB to 15dB, depending on frequency.
The second is the Tek 485's internal "real" 50ohm input. Notice the return loss is a respectable 30-40dB at all frequencies, and correspondingly the Smith chart indicates it is close to 50ohm at all frequencies
The last is equivalent to almost all scopes with an external load. It is the Tek 485 with an external 50ohm inline load and the 1Mohm//20pF input. Notice the significantly worse return loss >100MHz of -10dB, but it is respectable <10MHz.