Got the SDS2104X Plus today
Here are some quick first impressions:
Positive impressions:
- The scope feels solid and the shell is made from thick plastic. The handle is molded with a soft rubber grip.
- The screen is big, nice and relatively bright and clear. Not iPad clear, but quite OK. The viewing angles are good, except from below. Not an issue for me. Trace drawing is nice and clear.
- The form factor is perfect. I will trade individual vertical knobs for a big screen any day. Maybe in a future model the screen could even be a little bit bigger in the same form factor, if ditching the black bezel.
- The buttons are nice, relatively firm and with a good tactile feedback. Not the mushy kind, where the whole keyboard moves when pressing one button. In my opinion the button LEDs are nice and bright on 50% brightness. The layout is OK and grouped as you would expect. All scopes are different and an experienced scope user will have no trouble finding their way around this one. A couple of buttons could have been saved and put into the menus (See below).
- The encoder knobs are with soft touch and with a good detents on the horizontal/verticals. The least impressive parts are the four detent-less narrow encoder knobs, which are not completely straight and wobbles slightly when turned. They mar the quality feel a bit. Time will tell whether they will last.
- The scope feels pretty responsive. There is immediate audiovisual feedback from touch, so even though the scope may take a little longer to draw menus and make settings effective it does not feel especially laggy to operate. Maybe at some settings and with all 4 channels enabled it sometimes becomes a bit slow - but not unbearably so.
- User interface is nice, discrete and unobtrusive. Small, but easily readable fonts. Looks professional and modern. (Not gaudy and cartoony like some other scopes...). Maybe the top bar could have been slightly slimmer to provide more trace space and the icons left out to reduce the clutter.
- 10 bit mode is pretty good. I will likely run the scope in 10 bit dot mode most of the time - especially since it is limited to 100MHz anyway... (Vector interpolation really shouldn't be the default setting, as it will often fool users to use a scope beyond its true capacity.)
- Noise level is good!
- FFT also seems usable for a scope.
Potential for improvement:
- The probes accompanying the Oscilloscope are 200MHz PP215 1x/10x probes. However the probes have no detection pin, so even though the scope has a "10x probe detection ring", it does not work with the probes...
- Power button is a soft button and the scope uses almost 4W when turned "off"! Though, there is no apparent benefit (e.g. faster boot) from this substantial idle power use. For comparison EU regulations require consumer equipment to use less than 0.5W in off mode, so I guess oscilloscopes are exempted from this... A hardware button on the back would also have helped instead of having to pull the plug.
- Boot time of 45 seconds is just acceptable.
- The fan in the scope is not exactly silent. Although the scope has do dissipate ~55W, the airflow does not feel to be in proportion with the sound level from the fan. Also has a bit of "cricket" sound beyond the "whoosh"
- I would much prefer to have a "Force trig" button instead of the useless "Touch", "Default" or "Auto setup" buttons. The scope is pretty useless without touch and the other two could easily have been buried in the utility menu - especially since you have to confirm them by touch anyway... (Edit: actually they are already present in the Acquire menu)
- Bug: If touch is disabled (Press the "touch" button) and either "Auto setup" or "Default" is pressed, the scope locks up... (Software 1.3.5R5)
- Memory depth: At 10ms/div you get both maximum sample rate 2Gs/s (1 channel) and maximum memory depth 200Mpts. Above 10ms/div the sample rate is lowered because of the maximum memory depth. Below 10ms/div the memory depth is lowered. Ideally the user could choose between using full memory depth (enabling "zoom out" functionality) or the current "automatic" mode resulting in a higher waveform capture rate. Yes, you can get almost the same functionality by never going below 10ms/div and using the "zoom in" functionality, but that is a bit of a work-around and clutters the screen.
- The AWG seems to be pretty good hardware wise, however, the software implementation is just a bit too rudimentary. I miss functionality like: modulation, double pulses and manually trigged pulses. I am not convinced it is worth the €200+ price. It should be easy to add in a firmware update, though.
I have not really used the scope yet, but all in all, it seems like a very nice scope, which is comparable to the regular "A-brands" but at a great price/performance ratio.