@rf-loop: Thanks for your tests - and, as I've mentioned before, the new DSO from Siglent looks very interesting.
But as I've also mentioned before (in the New Siglent DSO thread), the measured waveform update rates at slower time bases looks slightly strange.
The problem is simply a matter of time - and I don't just mean the time it takes to actually sample 14M or 28M of data - which in itself, is a fairly large chunk of time - but more importantly, the time it takes to decimate and process that many samples to display memory.
According to your Trigger Out readings - the Siglent is
very fast at slower time bases - faster than the Rigol DS2000 or Agilent X-2000 or even the 1 million wfrm/s Agilent X-3000 - or ANY other DSO, for that matter, that I've seen measured - if you look at the throughput (sample size * wfrm/s). Starting at 50us/div, the blind time is considerably lower than all of the competition - but if you consider the Siglent's throughput, it's speeds are better than Agilent's MegaZoom ASIC design even at smaller time bases. Of course, these rates are in Dots mode - while the Agilent is doing anti-aliasing and interpolation - but it's significant nonetheless.
Now of course, it's possible that Siglent has achieved something new with their design - but it's also possible that they
might be cheating with the Trigger Out rate. For example, @500us/div, the Siglent supposedly has a rate of 135 wfrm/s with a 14M sample size. Alternatively, the Rigol DS2000 series has a waveform update rate of just 39 wfrm/s when having to capture and decimate a 14M sample size, but a waveform update rate of 140 wfrm/s with a 14k sample size - much closer to the Siglent (and Agilent's) rate.
So, you see my point: this has to either be a new technological advance by Siglent with very-deep memory sampling and decimation speeds - or it has to be something else. Perhaps you can run some tests just to confirm that the DSO is actually capturing AND decimating, for example, 135 wfrm/s of 14M @ 500us/div?
And perhaps you can test the Siglent's wfrm/s speed when you switch between different sample lengths @ a single time base like 500us/div?