Its not difficult to find a scope with similar specs but the aim is to find something significantly better. In my opinion a significant improvement would be a display which has way more pixels in height (the height is a limiting factor when displaying multiple traces with some amount of detail). A faster user interface and more bandwidth would also be nice.
I think you'll struggle - and that's without taking too much notice of the cost. Plugging in an external monitor to get a bigger, brighter, clearer display was about the best £20 I've ever spent on lab kit.
I've just upgraded my TDS754D to an Agilent MSO-X3054A, more for the sake of ongoing, long-term reliability than anything else. I can't afford to be without a scope, and the Agilent came up at a very good price from the agilentused Ebay store.
The Agilent does have some 'nice to have' new features compared to the Tek. For example:
- the ability to display traces in colour at the same time as the intensity graded, high speed display
- saving PNG files to USB instead of using RLE and floppy discs
- logic analyser and waveform generator
- serial and parallel bus decoding
- a very welcome increase in available lab bench space
- quieter operation
- doesn't make the lab uncomfortably hot when it's been on for a while
If that comes across as a pretty disappointing sounding selection for 15 years' worth of scope development, then I'd entirely agree - though I think that's a testament to just how good the TDS7xx range was rather than any failing in the Agilent.
It's worth mentioning how much more usable the long memory in the Agilent is than the Tek. I gave up trying to fight with the Tek's awkward, clumsy UI in respect of setting the memory depth, zooming in and out, and using the segmented memory. In the Agilent, the memory depth is always selected optimally, the sample rate is kept as high as possible given the time base, and the horizontal scale & position controls always work exactly as I expect them to. The search & navigate features are really fast and intuitive too, even though there are (inexplicably) many more event types that can be used for triggering than can be searched for. I'd have expected the opposite, if anything.
The Agilent's UI is more responsive overall, as you'd expect, though in some ways it's actually less quick to use. Maybe the difference is just familiarity, but for me, pressing a couple of buttons in sequence is quicker than pressing a button and then turning a knob to select from a sub-menu. I think it'll take a while to get used to the trigger controls too; the relatively small number of soft keys means the Agilent has one (hard) button to select the trigger source, type and slope, and another to select mode (auto/manual), coupling, noise rejection and so on.
I do miss equivalent time sampling, which the Agilent doesn't have. I've found a few really surprising firmware bugs in it too, though nothing I can reproduce reliably enough to describe and report.
I couldn't say I'm actually disappointed with the 3000X, because it's clearly a very capable instrument and will no doubt serve me very well - but if your TDS744A is working well then I'd stick with it. Unless I can persuade you to upgrade to a recently retired TDS754D?