M
Mike Rocket J. Squirrel E
Guest
A friend who is handy with computers but not so handy with oscilloscopes
wants me to help him interpret what he is seeing on his Tek scope. But I
live about 1,000 miles away. It seems like a PC-based scope might be
handy if he could e-mail data files to me in some format that I can use
to "look over his shoulder" on my PC to see what he's been seeing.
Either screen captures, or several seconds of data playback. I operate
in teacher mode with him. Maybe the scope software has a "scope viewer"
module for not much money.
I could use recommendations for something under $500
USB
2 channels
external sync input along with the usual internal line, edge, etc., sync
modes.
8 bits is enough
bandwidth: single-shot mode, to 100kHz; in repetitive mode to 1MHz.
Reliable, voltage-protected inputs
good solid software,
portability not really needed.
--
Mike "Rocket J Squirrel" Elliott
71 Type 2: the Wonderbus
84 Westfalia: Mellow Yellow ("The Electrical Banana")
KG6RCR
wants me to help him interpret what he is seeing on his Tek scope. But I
live about 1,000 miles away. It seems like a PC-based scope might be
handy if he could e-mail data files to me in some format that I can use
to "look over his shoulder" on my PC to see what he's been seeing.
Either screen captures, or several seconds of data playback. I operate
in teacher mode with him. Maybe the scope software has a "scope viewer"
module for not much money.
I could use recommendations for something under $500
USB
2 channels
external sync input along with the usual internal line, edge, etc., sync
modes.
8 bits is enough
bandwidth: single-shot mode, to 100kHz; in repetitive mode to 1MHz.
Reliable, voltage-protected inputs
good solid software,
portability not really needed.
--
Mike "Rocket J Squirrel" Elliott
71 Type 2: the Wonderbus
84 Westfalia: Mellow Yellow ("The Electrical Banana")
KG6RCR