To me the images of the Lecroy scope showing a modulated carrier look pretty grim compared to the elegant image you see on a decent analogue scope.
True, but then this is no analog scope but then this is a 7yr old 3Ghz scope based on a design that came out in 2001 and for that I think it's pretty reasonable in that mode (which isn't necessarily what I'd use in practice). But yes, if you want to
look at modulated signals the way you do that on an analog scope then it's the wrong scope. But it's also not a scope that is really on-topic, and as stated I posted the screen shots for fun only anyways (and because I was shocked how terrible the "graded" MDO3000 screenshot looks).
Also, I guess my other scope (WaveRunner 64Xi, unfortunately out of order at the moment) would have been a better choice for that scenario, as it has a mode called
WaveStream which much better reflects the behavior of an analog scope:
(the video shows a WaveRunner Xi)
But I could live with the Lecroy if it was the only scope available. However, I'd expect to have to spend a fair bit of time setting it up to get something reasonable on the screen.
Not necessarily, intensity grading is just one form to capture this information. Color grading might actually be a better option:
The color grading shows much better that it's modulated with a sine wave.
Or you could look at a 3D image:
The Wireframe isn't much use but the pits and grooves show clearly that this is an AM modulated waveform and that the modulation signal is sine-like.