Sorry, but you don't know what you are talking about.
Really?
Here's a 1GHz sine wave sampled @ 20GSa/s:
Here at 10GSa/s:
Here at 5GSa/s
Here at 2.5GSa/s
Here at 1GSa/s
That's a 1GHz signal from an Anritsu MG3700A Vector Signal Generator fed into a 3GHz 20GSa/s LeCroy WavePro 7300A scope (the BNC cable I used had a flaky connector which resulted in slight amplitude variations but I couldn't be bothered to unpack a new cable).
I guess we agree that it's obvious why the 1GSa/s screenshot looks like shit, so please go ahead and point out to me the additional details you believe you see on the shots sampled at 5GSa/s and higher vs the 2.5GSa/s shot.
Yeah, there aren't any.
Next time, before you tell others they don't know what they're talking about, I recommend you get a at least a basic understanding of waveform math and signal physics, because the simple fact is that a continuous-time sine wave that is sampled at >2xf
0 can truly reproduced using sin(x)/x interpolation, and any increase in sample rate will not result in additional details. The math behind it doesn't lie.
A 1GHz oscillation burst is more faithfully transcribed and much more readily discerned if it is sampled at 5GHz rather than 1GHz. I don't think that this should be a contentious fact.
(emphasis mine)
Yes, a 1GHz
burst requires a higher sample rate than 2.5GSa/s (or 5GSa/s, for that matter), as due to its non-continuous properties it will contain frequency components that are much higher than f
0. But it also requires an analog bandwidth of a lot more than 1GHz, so the 7904 is utterly useless for such signals. You might see
something, but it won't have much to do with how the input signal really looks like.
Why do you think that reputable manufacturers like Lecroy make DSOs with real-time sampling rates ten times the -3dB (analogue) bandwidth if it is "nonsense" even to sample at five times the BW?
Simple, really:
- As nctnico said, most scope series contain higher bandwidth models, and a 1GHz scope requires a faster sampling rate than the 350MHz model. You'll also find that for some scope series, the lower BW models come with a much lower sample rate (i.e. the LeCroy WaveRunner2 LT, WR6k(A), WR6zi, WP7Zi(-A))
- Higher than required sample rates allow the use of oversampling techniques to increase vertical resolution to up to 16bit (i.e. R&S RTE, RTO Series)
- While low-end scopes usually use standard components for ADCs, mid-range and high-end scopes usually use ADC hybrids that are inhouse developments of the scope manufacturers, which makes them pretty expensive. To keep costs down, they are often re-used across scope ranges, with as few as possible variants
- A high sample rate looks impressive on the spec sheet