tmr4 wrote:
For reference to future readers, here are some shots from the Siglent SDS 1202X-E and SDS 1104X-U. The 1202X-E is basically one half of the 1204X-E. It has a 200 MHz bandwidth with 1 GSa/s with 1 channel active but drops to 500 MSa/s with 2 channels active (I believe the 1204X-E can do 1 GSa/s with channels 1 and 3 active, but drops to 500 MSa/s adding in channels 2 and 4). The 1104X-U is the budget 4 channel 100 MHz bandwidth scope (w/ 1 channel you get 1GSa/s, w/ 2 you only get 500 MSa/s and w/ 3 or 4 you get 250 MSa/s).
The 1202X-E trace below is similar to the 1204X-E trace in the previous post with the scope in dot mode with continuous trace. This is with a signal of about 500 Hz.
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However, if you take a single capture, the effect of bandwidth becomes more apparent. The rising edge is defined by 5 points.
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With a 10 MHz signal we have the following at a 5ns scale in dot mode. Note that the lag at about 3.5 volts is due to the circuit. It's not there after I disconnected the oscillator from the circuit in the probe traces at the bottom of this post. Still, it demonstrates scope performance with a not uncommon discontinuity.
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With 2 channels active, the 1202X-E drops to 500 MSa/s, considerably dropping the resolution:
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The 1104X-U performs similar to the 1202X-E in 1 or 2 channels:
at 500 Hz:
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or 10 MHz:
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But things aren't so good with 3 or 4 channels active on the 1104X-U:
At 500 Hz:
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At 10 MHz:
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you only get a sample about every 5 ns.
The probes that come with the two scopes are different. The 1202X-E comes with 200 MHz, PP215 probes. The 1104X-U come with 100 MHz, PP510 probes (I think the 1104X-E comes with these as well). Physically the two look almost the same. The PP215 has a slightly smaller probe tip than the PP510.
I don't have enough experience to judge the probes electrically, but here are some traces of the two, with the 200 MHz probe in yellow and the 100 MHz probe in purple. First both together at 500 MSa/s.
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And singly at 1 GSa/s.
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That is very good data to have. Thanks a lot.
Indeed, at 1GSa/s, you'll only get a sample every nanosecond, which is not a lot of points in this rising edge. I'm sure the scope is applying some averaging over many traces to increase the resolution during that transition for the measurement, but I'm not familiar with how it works and the resulting accuracy you get.
The fastest IC in my system is a DS1035, with a 2ns typical rise time. I would only get 2-3 data points with the Siglent. The LeCroy I got goes to 4GSa/s, meaning 12 data points per edge in this case.
I've been doing some research, and I found the following document talking about the analog frontend bandwidth, added to the probe's, and the resulting accuracy of the analog signal that gets to the ADC.
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According to this document, a 100MHz scope paired with a 100Mhz probe has a combined bandwidth of 70Mhz. According to the rule of 3x, this means it can represent with 5% accuracy up to 14,34ns rise times. Faster than that and the error increases.
The LeCroy, on the other hand, would be 1Ghz with a 1Ghz probe. Similarly, that's 700Mhz total bandwidth, which can accurately represent rise times up to 1,43ns.
So this confirms my numbers in the top post. I think I used 0.35 there and they used 0.338 here. This number depends on the scope's internal circuitry and varies by model and manufacturer...