Hi,
As I did this measure:
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/show-us-your-square-wave/msg4045285/#msg4045285
And compare it to the screenshot from the lecroy wr9054, what I don't quite like is the very squeezed display when using the stats function on the sds2k+.
Is it because of the lower resolution of the siglent (1024x600 vs 1280x XXX, I´ve forgotten it) ?
Or can it be optimized by lowering the font size....
Martin,
that is always an interesting problem, comparing screen layout on 15" and 10" screens.
1024/600 (1,706 AR) vs 1280/800 (1,6 AR) is not a problem here. Physical size is.
In last decade, we see screen elements on our devices being smaller and smaller, and screens getting so high DPI that pixels are not visible anymore. And on our phones they are making some fonts on screen literally 1,5 mm high. If you look at them with magnifying glass they are perfectly formed fonts and look perfect. But held at arm length, they are just bunch of dots. Look around you and you'll see all these people sticking phones in their face....
There is also problem of gestalt. When reading a text in some language, our brain has capability to correctly recognize what word it is even if some letters are smudged or not legible. Brain kind of recognizes it as a pattern. Captchas work that way.
So even if you cannot perfectly see all the details of the font (because it is too small) you will still recognize the words, especially after some practice.
But numbers are different. Numbers you need to see, clearly and unambiguously, each one. You need to see decimal point(comma), grouping, you need to see SI prefixes...
So there is a limit how small stuff can get on a screen. An by that I mean in millimeters, not pixels.
On wr9054 they actually use less pixels for elements and fonts are more blocky... But large enough to be legible.
But since screen is larger, that gives them more millimeters for the waveform.
On SDS6000 it is closer to what you see on wr9054, because of 12" screen. I would consider SDS6000 layout to be at the edge of what can be achieved. Any further miniaturization would be potentially too much for normal reading.