C
Captain Blammo
Guest
I would really rather like to get myself an oscilloscope, mainly for
capturing digital signals (though analogue would be nice too) from
electronics. I am, however, not exactly rolling in money, and so would like
something that is as cheap as possible without being a piece of junk.
I have seen a couple of "PC oscilloscopes" that connect via a USB port to
let the PC do the hard work, and was just wondering what everyone's opinion
on them is. Specifically, I was thinking of the OPTAscope 81M. It can only
sample waves <60kHz, does that seem like enough for most things? I'd like to
pipe TV signals in too, what kind of frequencies are they at?
I'd ideally like something that has flexible software (preferably allowing
you to program your own visualisations with relative ease) if such a thing
exists. Linux or Windows.
Advice is greatly appreciated!
Ewan
capturing digital signals (though analogue would be nice too) from
electronics. I am, however, not exactly rolling in money, and so would like
something that is as cheap as possible without being a piece of junk.
I have seen a couple of "PC oscilloscopes" that connect via a USB port to
let the PC do the hard work, and was just wondering what everyone's opinion
on them is. Specifically, I was thinking of the OPTAscope 81M. It can only
sample waves <60kHz, does that seem like enough for most things? I'd like to
pipe TV signals in too, what kind of frequencies are they at?
I'd ideally like something that has flexible software (preferably allowing
you to program your own visualisations with relative ease) if such a thing
exists. Linux or Windows.
Advice is greatly appreciated!
Ewan