For months, I've been trying to decide between the Instek GDS-1062A and the Rigol DS1052E. I'd been leaning toward the Instek, but hadn't convinced myself to pull the trigger yet. Today, a new model from Instek caught my eye: the GDS-1072A-U.
Compared to the GDS-1062A, the GDS-1072A-U appears to have:
70 MHz bandwidth vs. 60 MHz
5.7" LCD vs. 5.6"
USB host port (for USB flash drives) instead of SD slot
PictBridge support
Measurement "Gating" (allows you to bracket where on the waveform measurements are taken?)
Adjustable probe multiplication factor (0.1X - 2000X)
Observation Delay (configurable time-delay for trigger)
Observation-Expand by Ground/Center (like AC coupling, but better somehow?)
Zoomable FFT
Data logging
Go/No-Go testing
Both models have 1GSa/s sampling rate and 2M point memory.
Sorry for the imprecise descriptions; it's not always easy to translate marketing-speak into engineer-speak. Hopefully someone with more expertise on DSOs than myself can opine as to the value of those changes. Full descriptions are here:
http://www.tequipment.net/InstekGDS-1072A-U.htmlThey also make a 100 MHz and a 150 MHz version. The prices (from tequipment.net) are as follows:
Instek GDS-1072A-U 70 MHz $486
Instek GDS-1102A-U 100 MHz $666
Instek GDS-1152A-U 150 MHz $841
The 60 MHz Instek GDS-1052A goes for $409. The 50 MHz Rigol goes for $399, and the 100 MHz Rigol for $795.
In googling around, I found another vendor that has the GDS-1102A-U for only $536:
http://www.testequipmentdepot.com/instek/oscilloscopes/gds-1102a-u.htmI'm not familiar with Test Equipment Depot, but I emailed Tequipment.net, and they said they'll pricematch. 100 MHz for $536 may be too good a deal to pass up.
Does anyone have any experience with the new GDS-xxxxA-U scopes? Has anyone seen what's inside one? Does anyone see any red flags in the specs or description of the new models?
For the record, I have no affiliation with any of the manufacturers or vendors mentioned above; I'm just an EE looking for a good, cheap scope.