As stated earlier, the XY display mode on most DSOs really pales in comparison to the good old analog scope. I've never used the Siglent in question, so really can't comment on that.
Another thing to take a look at is the available memory and sampling modes. It's fine to look at the max sample rate of 1GS/s, but if you want to look at the RF envelope using just the RF sampler, the story changes a bit. To get a decent picture of the envelope of a voice modulated signal (AM, SSB, etc.), you'll need to have the horizontal scale somewhere around 1ms/div, thus a 10ms long acquisition. The waveform memory will determine what the effective sample rate will be. For example, if you use a 10,000 point waveform record, the effective sample rate of the waveform will be 10,000 Samples divided by 10ms, or just 1MS/s - which is clearly insufficient to accurately capture the 28MHz RF signal. In other words, it will alias it and not give you a meaningful look at the RF envelope. You'd need to have at least a 1M record length so that the 10ms capture has an effective waveform sample rate of 100MS/s to sufficiently sample the RF.
Of course, many scopes have different sampling modes (Peak detect, etc.) that can help avoid these problems, but you'd have to make sure that the appropriate sampling mode is compatible with the intensity grading in order to get a decent looking RF envelope.
Sometimes it's just hard to beat a good old analog scope for looking at XY displays, RF Envelopes, trapezoid patterns, etc.