I know that many online comments seem to indicate that USB oscilloscopes should be avoided. But I wonder how many of the authors of those comments are serious professionals with requirements well beyond what I would need?
The root problem with USB devices is that a general purpose desktop environment is very cumbersome with a complex instrument like an oscilloscope. It's awkward and time consuming when compared to simple knobs and buttons. It becomes very tedious to click on hundreds of different things to control your instrument, imagine what it would be like to point, click, select from drop down box, re-point, click, select from drop down box, re-point, click, select from drop down box, etc. hundreds of times and you can begin to get a feel for the problem. The second problem is the lag, on my Analog Discovery it feels like it takes over 100ms from the time I click on something for that action to take effect, it also lags at updating the screen. I love my
Analog Discovery, but I wouldn't use it as my main instrument.
So here’s what I am looking at (in no particular order):
Link Instruments MSO-19 http://shop1.usbdso.com/MSO-19-MSO-19.htm
Strong no. It is limited to a single shot sample rate of 200 MSa/s. This will limit you to a usable bandwidth of about 40 MHz (200 MS / 5 = 40 MHz). If you choose to go with a USB instrument make sure it uses USB 3.0 at a minimum.
Analog Arts SL917 http://www.analogarts.com/selection-guid/oscilloscope-with-arbitrary-waveform-generator-and-logic-analyzer/sl917-100-mhz-oscilloscope-10-mhz-awg-100-mhz-logic-analyzer
Strong no, limited to a single shot sample rate of 100 MSa/s. Disregard bandwidth, single shot sample rate is king when it comes to digital oscilloscopes. For every MHz bandwidth you need preferably a minimum of five times the sample rate to faithfully reproduce a waveform. i.e. 100 MHz bandwidth requires 500 MSa/s. The more samples you have the better, for instance, I bought a 4 GSa/s (4000 MSa/s) scope. You need extra sampling to prevent aliasing.
QuantAsylum QA101 https://www.quantasylum.com/content/Products/QA101.aspx
Strong no. Again, the problem is it's limited to 200 MSa/s. You would need a USB 3.0 interface to get higher sampling rates.
BitScope http://www.bitscope.com/product/BS10/
Strong no. Yet again, the problem is it's limited to 100 MSa/s. Without the sample rate to support it, the 100 MHz bandwidth rating they claim is essentially a lie. Nyquist requires an absolute minimum of 200 MSa/s with a sin(x)/x interpolation algorithm to reproduce a 100 MHz signal, anything less and you will be aliasing. I can not over stress how important it is that you have a high single shot sample rate. sub-sampling/equivalent time sampling are NOT the same thing as single shot/continuous sampling.
Saleae Logic 8 https://www.saleae.com/
It would make a mediocre logic analyzer, but as an oscilloscope it's pure crap. The analog side is limited to 10 MSa/s! Hell no. As an LA, you would need the Pro version to get good results.
and of course:
Rigol DS1054Z (DS1074Z Plus?) http://www.rigol.com/prodserv/250/
This is the only product you've listed that has an acceptable sample rate. If these are your only choices the Rigol is the clear winner.
For a “real” oscilloscope, it seems the Rigol is the hands down winner. Also the most expensive of the above list; Also the most portable.
I'm wiling to pay for a good solution, but I'm fairly certain I don't need a $1000+ setup to use occasionally at home. It also doesn't need to be portable.
About a month ago I was in the same boat you are in, and yesterday I ended up plopping down $2594 for a Rigol MSO4014. This was the minimum that I felt was necessary to do this hobby justice. I evaluated the Rigol MSO/DS1000Z and honestly I thought it felt like a toy, but it may work for your needs. I also evaluated the Rigol MSO/DS2000 and this would have been perfect, if only it had 4 channels. I don't think you want to spend what I did, so what I would recommend for you is the Rigol MSO2072A, right now this scope is selling for $929.25 over at
www.tequipment.net with a special 25% off code. PM me and I can send you the code. If you don't have a signal generator the MSO2072A-S might be a better option for you. I highly recommend the Rigol's because that is what the community knows, everyone flocked around them because nearly all of them are hackable to higher bandwidths. For instance, the MSO4014 that I bought can be hacked to 500 MHz, on a western made Keysight 500 MHz would cost you $14k, so the Rigols offer extremely good value for the money... exactly what a hobbyist wants.
The following Rigol models are all 25% off right now at tequitment:
DS1074Z-S
DS1102D
DS2072A-S
DS2102A-S
DS2202A
DS2202A-S
DS2302A-S
DS4012
DS4034
DS4054
DS6062
MSO2072A
MSO2072A-S
MSO2101A
MSO2102A
MSO2302A
MSO2302A-S
MSO4014