To clarify: which Rigol have you used? If it is a 1000Z then the comparison isn't very realistic because the SDS2000 is in a different class.
Nico, he's using his
DS1054Z DS1074Z. And comparing his $2600 SDS2304 against the
$400 $600 Rigol. Though I doubt the cheaper "comparable" SDS2074 at only ~$1200 performs
much any differently in this test.
What he's really trying to show though is that the residual noise on the Siglent is lower than the Rigol. And looking at the "fuzz" on the Rigol waveform, one can see that the
3x 2x costlier Siglent does appear to be better in this regard. That is always good to know, that for
$800 $600 more one can get a cleaner trace.
The screen notation about "Extremely difficult to get any stabile [sic] trig" though is an unwarranted, and unfair criticism. It's pretty obvious that the trigger level on the Rigol is set higher (0.7mV), and closer to the peak than on the Siglent (0mV). Also, he doesn't mention it, but bumping the vertical to 1mV/div on the cheap Rigol would make triggering even easier. But he can't do that, because the
3x twice as expensive Siglent is already maxed out at 2mV/div, and can't do 1mV/div at any noise level.
[BTW, I'm not trying to set rf-loop off here, and generate a barrage of defensive posting. I think his intentions were honest, and he simply wanted to share his observation that his
1054z 1074z has a higher residual noise level than his Siglent scope, that can potentially obscure signal detail, or imply there is noise in a source signal, that's really inside the Rigol. And that's always a good thing to know. (It's also unsurprising, in an instrument in this price class.)
But anyone who has a vested interest (and rf-loop does, in the SDS) has to be really careful in posting
any comparisons, because they will get nit-picked to death. So I definitely give him credit for trying, and sharing his observations. I wouldn't want to discourage that.]
[NB: updated with strikeouts to correct errors. Sorry.]