Because FW is preliminary version there is perhaps many things what need adjust. I hope they also adjust some parameters for better optimized intensity grading and optimized also separately for different time bases.
From what I've seen, the intensity-grading seems very nicely done - better and more fluid than the Rigol UltraVision or Agilent X-Series, I think.
That being said, given all of the information that has (or has not) been posted, I think the answer to
the question I've been asking since November 13 (when Herman posted the first wfrm/s chart) might be:
Q: How does the Siglent achieve intensity-graded throughput speeds much faster than the Agilent 3000-X?
A: It doesn't.
It seems that the DSO might not use the intensity buffer (or at least, not in the same way) when sample sizes are >= 1.4M (in other words, at time bases >= 50us/div with those sample sizes). In any case, there are no images (from Siglent or anyone else) of the DSO using grading with deep sample lengths.
If this is true, then this is exactly at the same point where (
shown in this previous chart I posted) the intensity-graded throughput speeds of the DSO would far surpass the Agilent 3000-X (and every known competitor).
This might also help explain why it's exactly beyond this same point (<= 560k samples @ <= 20us/div) when the Siglent starts experiencing a steep falloff in it's wfrm/s speeds between Dots and Vectors - since the processing time difference in displaying Dots or Vectors is more significant if intensity-grading is used:
Now, if this is all true (and of course, it's speculation based on the evidence presented) - is it a bad thing?
Not necessarily - there's an argument to be made that, when samples per pixel ratios gets greater than a certain amount, the capture rate should take precedence over grading. As a user, I would like that capability for certain applications - my only wish would be that it was a user-selectable option - as opposed to automatic behavior.