Just got news that LeCroy came out with a new scope:
LeCroy HDO9000- BW 1/2/3/4GHz
- up to 40GSa/s
- 10bit ADC
- 128Mpts sample memory
- 16ch MSO optional, plus a High-speed Digital Analyzer option
- 15.4" 1280x800 touchscreen with multi-touch and gestures
Datasheet:
http://cdn.teledynelecroy.com/files/pdf/hdo9000-oscilloscope-datasheet.pdfList prices from $21k for the 1GHz version to $37k fpr the 4GHz variant.
The HDO9000 is clearly positioned against the Keysight Infiniium S which is Keysight's 10bit proposition with BW ranges from 500Mhz to 8GHz, sample rates up to 20GSa/s, up to 800Mpts memory and a 15" XGA (1024x768) touchscreen display. Prices for the DSO-S start at $18k for the 500Mhz variant, at S21k for the 1GHz variant, at $37k for the 4Ghz variant and go up to $69k for the 8GHz variant. The prices are similar to the HDO900 which suggests that LeCroy has stopped to undercut Keysight on price.
Remarkable is that, like with the WaveRunner 8000 that came out earlier this year, LeCroy has again settled for what today in this class can only be considered as very moderate sample memory sizes (128M vs up to 800M on the Keysight).
On the other side, all the typical LeCroy features are there, i.e. WaveScan which is free (while the inferior Keysight InfiniiScan costs another $1200 or so), the UI has been modernized with multi-touch, gestures and tabs, and the list of available options is pretty long as one would expect.
Still, the small sample memory of the HD9000 is very disappointing, especially when considering that this time the distance to the competition is much smaller than ever before. The DSO-S
is really a very attractive proposition.
Would be interesting to see both scopes in a trial.
Update: stupid thought error removed