I got so much info from this thread that I purchased the Siglent 804x. I have a question about probes though. So I want to make noise measurements, so I want a probe that has better than 20 Mhz bandwidth at 1x. It would be nice to have 200 Mhz bandwidth at 10x so I only have one probe. Looking at the threads, is the RIgol PP215 or the PVP2350 the one to get. Siglents probes dont see to have the specs. Thanks.
I found the scope to be great except that it doesnt have wifi (yet). And it is a pain to be having to connect a LAN cable all the time. So I searched for a solution and found one. My requirement is for a LAN to wifi bridge that uses USB power that is low and once configured, can be ignored. I found (in the US) a Vonets VAP11N-300. Its not the fastest out there, but it is plenty fast and it uses low power. Their spec is .5A but I measured .25A. It costs $26 in the US from Amazon. It needs to be configured on a laptop that has both a free ethernet port and USB port. Plug it in, wait a minute for it to boot, connect to 192.168.254.254 in your browser the first time. Turn off repeater mode, change password, search hotspot and connect to your wifi. Reboot the unit and it should now work. After it connects to your wifi, you must now connect to vonets.cfg. If you want, you can configure the NTP server. One warning is check the firmware version before attempting to update firmware. It took overnight for hte firmware to download, so I would skip that if possible. Then shut down and attach to your Siglent. When the Siglent boots, it will show 1969 as the date until about a minute. Then the Vonets finishes booting and the time (if you have configured the NTP server in Siglent) is now correct! You can now attach the Vonets with double sticky tape to the back of the Siglent.