The Rigol 8000 has genuinelly been absolutely rock steady and no issues have I found when using it which is almost daily. Now when I am conducting our critcal measurments then yes I will use the Wavepro no question or one of the othe Lecroy's. Though on occasions; I have out of curiousity fired up the Rigol just to see how good in REAL terms it compares against a a quality reference. It does stand up very well indeed in a few areas no question. I would suggest this Rigol model is more than a hobbist scope, maybe a semi pro range but with some really nice features. Its also been robost and stable.
@Sighound36 thank you for your valuable input as someone who actually has a Rigol 8000.
From your input and some other comments that I've seen around it appears that the Rigol 8000 is not to be underestimated and as a second high bandwidth scope it is definitely a good choice. However if you were to hypothetically have the Rigol 8000 as your only scope without any of your Lecroy scopes to cross-check with, would the Rigol give you enough confidence in your measurements? Would it limit you in any way and if so what would be the main limitations in your opinion?
Hello grg183
Sorry but the pc swallowed the last reply:
Th reason I use Lecroys is for the work we do I require really tight accuracy that the 12 bit scopes really do give, the app toolbox is just amazing and they really do work very well and have many decent features but at a cost.
We have a narrow focus of products, audio digital, high speed data transfer, PDN, ultra quiet linear power supplies, fpga coding and green energy projects. The Rigol 8000 is a very capable scope is far and away any toy. It has features that a lot of the big four scopes will not be able to access until you reach a basic scope price of £18Kish. the apps from R&S and KS are not in the 'its only a bit more category' IMHO if you spend £20K on a scope then with the basic quality robes current/HVDP and qaulity 1Ghz active probe then that can be up to half the cost of the scope again, this is without any toolbox apps, Tek jitter app is £6K alone.
To have the Wavepro HD to have the same features as the Rigol 8000 this is going to be £54K plus the logic probe is quite a bit and the 500Mpts of memory they have another of you buy model 'x' then you will receive either a BW upgrade or Mem upgrade to 1GPTs to 2, but that’s costly.
The HDO8000 is not far behind and limited to 2Ghz bw. but again its a class act only with 10G/s instead of 20G/s compared to the wavepro HD
the EXR & RTO6 are the same money as basic 600mhz units, add in the basic eye and jitter apps plus probes and you are well over £30+K
The 8000 has a great long memory which is useful for diagnosing serial data faults, clock lane noise, signal glitches that are infrequent, serial data glitches etc.
Its noise floor the lowest I managed with an open port 50 ohms, High rez on and bw to 20 Mhz with precision mode engaged on a 2.3Ghz model was around 85uv (after warm up) which is not bad for a 2.3Ghz scope, the Lecroy (8Ghz) manages around 1/3of that. Buts its more than four times the cost!
The eye app is a good basic starting point that will help you with signal integrity and data lane noise and checking board connectors and for looking at ISI by way of eye-opening patterns and widths. Te persistence is rather good to plus it has big waveform rates as ell.
The jitter app is also very nice and well thought out with C2C/TI/ -W2<>-W/ +W<> +W, plus you can change the cornerstone frequencies as well as a couple of PLL as well. plus three clock recovery options. Standard measurement parameters are all there and work well you can move the whole meas panel around the screen no probs either.
With jitter you can add a track & trend graphs as well are a histogram and throw in a spectrum analyser plot as well, It is all on the same screen though so do not expect multiple windows on this scope.
It is pretty accurate when you get into the large VTB numbers but it is very stable and never locked up on me at all, the digital ports and harness is pretty fair as well (this came with the scope as part of the bundle).
This is like a third generation Rigol product at this level and I feel they are really getting the acts together. Would it be my primary scope if we didn't need the fancy low noise and speed plus monster apps. It may well be.
This is just about using your tools to work for you in the best way possible imho.
If you went down this route you could also purchase a great Keithley 6.5 or 7.5 digit DMM as well plus a a couple of misig new current probes as well.
Each has it place on my bench, for different reasons.
Here some images of the 8000 and the Wavepro going head to head last year and you can see the 8000 is not bad at all.
Its still on my bench 18 months down the line and sitting with some big hitters but it feels safe and secure
Sighound36