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Hereby, a separate thread about the SmartScope from LabNation, to share my thoughts about this device, and to hear feedback from other people.
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1 - Real value of a touch-screen interface: LabNation keeps saying that the touch-screen experience is so unique and so much better. But on what basis? A touch-screen interface is nice to have for media, or for navigation, but it will never replace the nice controls on a digital storage bench oscilloscope. My impression is that there is a disconnect between the assumptions from LabNation and the actual preferences and expectations from end users, industry, schools and universities.
2 - Bad learning experience for target group: LabNation says that their focus is students and electronic hobbyists. But why on Earth, would you want that students and electronic hobbyists leave the comfort of a real bench oscilloscope, and make their experience limited to a touch-screen interface, that is not used anywhere in the industry up to today. Talking about bad learning experience ...
3 - Stability and performance issues in the SmartScope: Several people have reported stability and performance issues. According to some users, the software freezes and crashes randomly, and the performance is very slow in some measurement scenarios.
4 - Tricky installation: Apparently iOS support only works after a jail-break of your Apple tablet device.
Not all people (typical Apple users) will know how to do this, and even if they know how to do it, many people want to keep their tablet device in the factory configuration, to avoid that the warranty is voided. Who wants to sacrifice the warranty on a premium high-end device in order to use a low-end device?
5 - The math functions are very limited: The only math function that is available is: A+B ... really???
This is very low in comparison with the Rigol DS1054Z oscilloscope, which comes with over 16 math functions.
6 - Multiple signals without math options: In the current software version you can combine several SmartScopes together for visualizing multiple signals, but what is the point of that, if the only math function that is available is A+B? Please enlighten me on this!
7 - Some features are below today's expectations or are simply missing: We have not talked yet about waveform update rate and intensity grading. The waveform update rate is limited to 200 waveforms/s
, while the industry standard is at least 30.000 waveforms/s these days. There is no intensity grading at all in the SmartScope (0 levels), while the industry standard is at least 64 intensity grading levels these days. Even in future software versions, there is no way, that the SmartScope is ever going to reach a decent waveform update rate on the tablet device (impossible without dedicated hardware), and any decent intensity grading implementation, will likely eat up too much CPU, and will further slow down the software.
8 - Rigol is the Chinese Toyota of oscilloscopes: The Rigol DS1054Z is the "most bang for buck" digital storage bench oscilloscope on the market today. It is very hard, and almost impossible, to beat the Rigol oscilloscope. It should be said that if you buy 2 SmartScopes to have 4 channels, you end up spending more money than if you would buy a Rigol DS1054Z oscilloscope up front, which has a much higher bandwidth, a much higher sample rate, a bigger memory, a much higher waveform update rate, and multiple intensity grading levels!
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Taking into account all of the above, I fail to understand where to position the SmartScope
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1 - Established players on the market: There are already, for many years, well-established players in the cheap USB scope segment, such as Owon, Hantek, and more recently SainSmart, that offer USB scopes, which are much cheaper (factor 2-3), which have better specs, and that come with much more advanced software (factor 5-10) such as automotive test software, etc.
2 - Real bench oscilloscope is cheaper and better: You can get a full-blown 4-channel bench oscilloscope for only 170 USD more (400 USD). You would need to buy 2 SmartScopes to get 4 channels in total (2x 230 USD), and you still need to add the price of a tablet device next to the SmartScope (add an extra 250-500 USD). This brings the total price up to at least 710 USD (with a tablet device) or 460 USD (without a tablet device), which confirms that the real bench oscilloscope option is cheaper if you need 4 channels in total (400 USD). Having 2 extra channels, real rotary controls and pushable knobs, and much better performance and stability, weighs far more up to a basic touch-screen interface, only 2 channels, and all the other known limitations. Note that LabNation started designing the SmartScope after the Rigol DS1054Z already existed on the market. So one can question if they did any market studies, and why they wanted to re-invent the wheel?
3 - Too expensive for what you get: The feature set of the SmartScope is not as good as the SainSmart DDS140 USB scope in several areas (lower bandwidth, lower sample rate, limited or no input protection, more limited extension options), while the SmartScope is much more expensive (230 USD) than the SainSmart DDS140 USB scope (85 USD). We are talking here about a factor of 2,7 ... really???
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Let's compare two specific options with each other: SmartScope from LabNation versus Rigol DS1054Z
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Option 1: 2 SmartScopes and an extra tablet device to get 4 channels
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2+2 channels (2 SmartScopes needed), max. 30 MHz bandwidth, max. 100 MS/s sample rate per channel,
max. 4 Mpoints memory per channel
Not a real analog front-end (toy allure), very basic input protection, very basic amplifier, very basic trigger
Waveform update rate of only 200 waveforms/s
No multi-level intensity grading display (0 levels)
Math options (only 1 math option: A+B)
Zero controls, very basic software
No support for LXI, NI-VISA, GPIB, TCP/IP
No calibration certificate
Very small company. No established user base at all (how many in total? 100, 200, 500?)
Very expensive: (2x 230 USD) + at least 250 USD = at least 710 USD or 460 USD (without tablet device)
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Option 2: Full-blown Rigol DS1054Z digital storage bench oscilloscope with 4 channels
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4 channels, up to 100 MHz bandwidth (> 3 times higher), up to 1 GS/s sample rate (2,5-10 times higher),
24 Mpoints memory in total (3-6 times higher)
Analog front-end (A-brand scope allure), good input protection, real analog amplifier, advanced trigger
Waveform update rate of up to 30.000 waveforms/s (150 times higher)
Multi-level intensity grading display (64 levels)
Math options (16 math options and more: A+B, A-B, A×B, A/B, FFT, &&, ||, ^, !, intg, diff, sqrt, lg, ln, exp, abs)
Many controls (rotary controls, pushable knobs), advanced software
Support for LXI, NI-VISA, GPIB, TCP/IP
Calibration certificate
International company (China, Germany, US). Huge established user base (> hundreds of thousands)
Much cheaper: 400 USD (All-in price)