I also tend to think (as a none user/owner of a DSO other that a lowly DSO138) that the screen is a bit off putting as the traditional CRO is a 8 x 10 grid and the DSO is a 8 x 15 grid and I suspect thats could be a trap for a new player as I suspect that they would try to replicate the imagery shown on a CRO on DSO which is never going to look the same as the display is going to look stretched width-ways. Also the image on the 2465 is considerably cleaner looking than the DSO and TBH I would have expected the DSO to have been the cleaner image seeing as it set to a higher v/div, lifting it further away from any background noise factor
Some deeper understanding of the basic differences and operation principles between a CRO and DSO are needed.
Analog CRO's are just that, analog, in the way that there's a defined signal path all the way to the CRT but let's just look at the vertical axis for simplicity.
What produces the clean crisp trace is the quality of the CRT and associated circuitry, after all it's just only a stream of electrons that needs to be only wide enough to provide good resolution/visibility.
DSO's on the other hand as tggzzz briefly comments on, gather data sample points and then plots them on the display by way of reconstruction and then interpolation to display the waveform we recognize.
Unlike a CRO where the display is near realtime, the DSO display cannot be updated at such high rates as a CRO sweep so the imagery is uploaded as a 'batch' if you like to the display at much slower rates.
So within each batch even for a repetitive waveform there are variations in the data points that manifest themselves in an apparently fussy displayed trace. Lower display vertical pixel counts can suppress this to some degree but we want higher vertical resolution not lower.
So how do we clean up the traces to something like a CRO ?
There's a couple of common solutions, HiRes/ERES or Averaging.
They achieve similar results but HiRes preserves waveform detail better.
Simply if we think of the 3 lines of data below then extract the upper and lower for a more defined trace.
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Dave's done a couple of vids to help DSO owners get their heads around how to deal with their apparently noisy scopes:
https://www.eevblog.com/2014/04/10/eevblog-601-why-digital-oscilloscopes-appear-noisy/https://www.eevblog.com/2014/04/27/eevblog-610-why-digital-scopes-appear-noisy-part-2/