I got myself an SDS2104X Plus...right before Christmas.
Merry Christmas to me as well; got my SDS2104+ on the day after. My initial impression (with apologies to Oscar Hammerstein II):
I'm in love, I'm in love, I'm in love, I'm in love, I'm in love with my wonderful 'scope. Youngsters may need to Google "South Pacific."
I also ordered the MSO option
Having already overspent on the 'scope, I bought an used HP/Agilent/Keysight/FutureNameHere logic pod converted for the Siglent for $50 delivered, from a seller here on eevblog. He has created an adapter that plugs into the scope, the downside being the lack of a housing for the plug end. It seems to stay in place without the added support, but if that becomes a problem I'll 3D print something.
I haven't had a chance to try it yet, but since everything but the adapter assembly is HP quality I expect it will work well. The used pod and flywires look to be in good condition. The woven cable is about a meter long.
The adapter looks to be very well designed to my inexperienced eyes: squiggles in apparently appropriate places, ground plane all the way into the 'scope and a 2nd board the size of the 'scope's plug opening, with a slit in the middle through which the adaptor's fingers slide at a 90 degree angle such that it extends the ground plane to cover the 'scope's plug opening. Almost forgot,
he sends two of each board so I have a spare for each as well.
I managed to run into some responsiveness problems early on
I haven't seen anything similar. When I received the 'scope I installed the latest firmware (thinking it would only install if it were newer - not the case as it turns out); no harmful effects at least. If you see the problem again you might give this a try.
The scope seems to use any excuse at all to nuke your history.
Say it ain't so! I'd read something that hinted at this but thought I'd misunderstood. Memory management was my main concern going with Siglent. I started out with a negative attitude due to a video from someone I've come to greatly respect, who savaged the Siglent approach. I'm looking at you, Dave!
Weeks of reading the Siglent threads lead me to believe I understood the advantage of the Siglent Way, and learning to think and work using the '
what you see is all you get' approach was worth the sacrifice. Now it sounds like that advantage was mostly smoke.
Siglent:
Please tell me this is a bug that will be fixed in the next update. Or tell me that you've decided to
discontinue swimming upstream on this front and will provide me
an option to use my buffers conventionally. This sounds like the best solution for everyone
including you - is this a religious issue in the Siglent universe?
When you're using the decode list...
That would be nice; I'd be surprised if we didn't see such an easy fix soon. But what I find a more glaring and surprising omission is the inability to search on decodes. I only bought the 'scope after I found that I can easily export my captured data for analysis on my PC (sigrok to the rescue).
I've gotten push-back on this feature as unnecessary or not useful, and while that may be true for the commenters, it isn't in my case. Sure, a real (USB-based) unit would allow far more powerful decoding and analysis that I can do on any 'scope. But if needed I can do that now using sigrok. A flexible and well-implemented search would cover the middle ground, which is where I anticipate spending much of my time.
But thus far, I'm overall very impressed. I've generally found that the scope is very responsive to manipulation of the menus.
I couldn't agree more. Other than dragging waveforms and such, the UI screams; even its slower operations are not frustrating.
Moreover, IMO it's UI is beautiful and well thought out. I guess many don't care, but the aesthetics of an instrument makes a difference in the usability of an instrument for me. I couldn't ask for more; in my limited experience they've wisely chosen which soft buttons to implement physically and have arranged the controls well.
I'm increasingly colorblind as I age and being able to set trace colors makes a real difference; as the 'scope arrived I could see little difference between the default colors on channels 3 & 4. Without the option to set trace colors my 'scope would be been practically reduced to 3 channels. That the trace buttons change colors to match the trace is a Rolls-Royce touch I didn't expect (if only they could get the probe's chicken-rings to do the same!).
One presumably easy change that would make the buttons better indicate channel state is to use a lower brightness for a button that is active but not selected, reserving full intensity for the selected channel and disabling the LEDs on inactive channels.
My biggest gripe has nothing to do with the 'scope: the docs are substandard beyond my expectation. No only is much omitted, but some information is flat wrong (look up setting the VNC port number, as one example). I hope there are many application notes I've yet to find.
I've spent several hours trying to get VNC working; years ago I used it often to control remote PC's and it's always just worked (this is my first attempt under Win10). I've found many VNC tutorials for Win10, not a single one of which helped, using either the default Windows app or UltraVNC. The manual is silent on this feature other than incorrect instructions for setting the port number. Come on, if a feature doesn't work with the default OS app, tell me how to use the damn thing.
I know Siglent adds and improves features routinely, but my version-free, undated manual doesn't tell me about them and provides no way of knowing when it was last updated so I know if I have the latest version. No need to take this as far as some do, with change logs and all, but a date and version number don't seem too much to expect.
This is perhaps more important to me than to others. I'm old and don't have much time left to waste - every hour is more precious than the last and it pisses me off then I have to waste even one hunting down information that should have been provided.
When I buy a no-name Chinese gadget, I factor that I will get no documentation or support into the purchase decision. Had I paid $140 rather than $1400 for the 'scope your documentation would have exceeded my wildest expectations. Please put some effort into this, what I see as your greatest weakness.
One last thing: keep in mind that especially when it comes to the usability angle, it's much easier to notice things that are done wrong than things that are done right.
You make an important point.
Part of any frustration about the SDS2K+ line may be the result of the generally wonderful job they've done on this instrument. X was done better than it is on some $10K scopes, but how could they have managed to screw up Y so badly? The better the good, the worse the bad looks in comparison.
Bottom line, bitching aside (and anticipating a history fix), I'm still singing. Thank you, Siglent!