I was going through this thread again and appreciating the value of it even more. After TunerSandwich took the time to explain the considerations needed in scope choice, I did some reading. Lots of reading. Lots of learning.
The design of SMPS circuits is a delicate symphony of analog signals adjacent to MOSETS and inductors switching huge currents VERY fast. I have been learning the basics with a 100Mhz / 1GS/s scope that simply misses all the important details. The rise time of the signals and the resulting ringing is regularly well beyond 100Mhz for a DC/DC converter operating at 750khz. The high-current switching can and will damage the various control signals and the designer must be able to see what is happening. All the calculations and simulations in the world will not tell you that the PCB layout is killing your otherwise lovely design. I am counting on a tell-all scope to slash my design time and give me much better circuits in the end.
I was waiting for the Keysight announcement of the 3000T series before doing anything. In the meantime, I picked up a Tek TDS754 500Mhz/2GS/s off of eBay to get me by for a while. What is abundantly clear is that my original budget for an MSO of $5k-ish is completely ridiculous. I have decided that I need to spend $15k - $20k to get what I want out of a scope. While that is a lot of money, I feel it will pay for itself in a very short period considering that I cannot go any further without some sort of MAJOR upgrade.
Although it may be a little overkill for what I do today, I have settled on a minimum of 1Ghz / 5GS/s / 4ch / MSO. I really want a good overall solution - not just what I would need to cover today's design challenges. I can only go by marketing bits and demos I have found on the internet so my view of these models is likely seen through rose colored glasses.
Top models being considered:
Keysight: MSOX-3000T
PROS: fast updates, hardware decode, touch/mouse control, triggering seems great, Arb Gen, lowest cost of the bunch
CONS: small memory, small screen
Keysight: MSOX-4000
PROS: fast updates, huge screen, hardware decode, touch/mouse control, triggering seems great, Arb Gen
CONS: small memory
LeCroy: HDO4000-MS
PROS: GIANT touch screen, 12bits, looong memory, power analysis
CONS: 2.5 GS/s (this conflicts with my hope of having 5 GS/s but gives 12 bit vertical resolution)
Not sure if trading sample rate for bit depth is worth it on these. 2.5 GS/s seems a little slow for a 1Ghz front end.
LeCroy: MXS-B
Still trying to add up the benefit of these. They have very fast sampling rates and lots of memory. Trying to figure out if they are near a model change. Does anyone have any opinion on these models.
LeCroy: Wavesurfer 10 with MS-500
PROS: 10 GS/s, 10Mpts, 10.4" touch screen, compact size
CONS: Not sure, nothing sticks out as marginal based on the marketing materials.
I had a feeling you would come around to this conclusion eventually. It's why I posted all the data and scenarios.
Since we work on the same systems, let me offer up a suggestion. This is an ideal scenario, with an "unlimited budget". HDO8000 from LeCroy.
If that kind of price isn't possible....then have a look at the 104MXi or MXiA.....you can score one used for roughly your projected budget....
HOWEVER, let me interject another critically important insight.
You NEED some in house standards. I.E. some references that allow you to verify equipment accuracy, before making critical measurements. I personally build all of my standards, and reference them against a known calibrated transfer standard. This is as important, if not more, than any amount of bandwidth or features you may think you need.
The other consideration in the scope is going to be memory depth. Remember that a minimum time window, to gather proper spectral results, is going to be greater than 1ms. You are going to need a lot of memory to maintain the proper sample rate across that time division (otherwise it defeats the purpose of the bandwidth and bit depth).
I HIGHLY recommend going with LeCroy. Their statistical functionality and interface are head and shoulders above anything I have ever used or owned (i have had some of the fancy agilents you are considering). Also the LeCroy triggering is unparalleled in these top tier models.
I hate to sound like a fanboi here, but I have been through this all before...and took a leap of faith (recently) on a LeCroy midrange scope.....I wouldn't even consider going back to anything from agilent or tek....and I am damn picky about this kind of stuff.
I wouldn't hold my breath on keysight, or any other company, catching up with the LeCroy philosophy, anytime soon. That isn't saying that LeCroy makes the "best" scopes or that all agilent units are inferior etc.....they simply have different approaches, and cater to different specialties....and LeCroy happens to cater to OUR needs (you and I) above and beyond any other manufacturer....
P.S. I sent you a reply to your PM a while back, but am not sure if it went through, as I never heard back from you....let me know (via PM) if you are still needing help, outside of the forum...
P.P.S we should really discuss references and standards, as they are going to become a VERY important part of your on-going discovery...and they are an art-form all to themselves. Removing AC coupled line noise from the measurements is going to be HIGHLY critical, and you can do that with some proper stabilized standards. You can then generate a mask (this is why LeCroy leads the way for us) to remove the measured AC/line components from your critical switching measurements. This is really where my experience has taught me that your measurements are key factors in determining potential problems in an SMPS. ESPECIALLY when dealing with DC-DC conversion....
P.P.P.S
another critical factor you need to look at, is the total dynamic range of your front end solutions (probes, i/o amplifiers etc).....this is equally important, as any other factor you might consider....you can't trust measurements that are clipping