These are the most vital tests, IMHO. The edges of a square wave are composed of the highest order harmonics of the fundamental, so these represent the 5,7,9, harmonics of 1 MHz with the last 2 most represented. So, it looks like the response is good to 9 MHz, for sine waves at -3dB.
When you switched to 5 MHz, the edges show high frequency limits via a drop in the rise time. You're now looking at distortion in the 25-45 MHz areas. The pure sine waves shown in the OP on this thread confirms the single qualitative square wave test at 1 MHz.
A 2 MHz sq wave would be most telling. It should show a less distorted square wave with a slow rise time; at 5 MHz, this waveform is looking more like a sine wave as the frequency response of the amp is 'filtering' off all the higher frequencies.
Hi All,
this is my first review so please forgive anything i miss.
This meter looks great, spells great and has a great price at about $200. Does it work great? Well, look at the following pictures of the screen and you can decide that.
First lets look at its Sine Wave performance.
As you will see from these pictures, it performs very well considering it is only rated as 8Mhz bandwidth.
The Square wave however is nothing short of terrible even for this price.
Al the signals were at 5vpp from a Rigol DG1022.