开云体育

ctrl + shift + ? for shortcuts
© 2025 开云体育

Re: Oscilloscopes - analog but with digital capability?


 

Bryce,

Several Tektronix scopes work that way. The portable 2232, 2211, and several others have a STORE/NON-STORE switch that lets you look at the same signal in either mode. The Tek 7854 mainframe also can do this. In all the scopes I listed, the digitizer rate cannot support single-shot captures at full bandwidth.

--John Gord

--- In hp_agilent_equipment@..., Bryce Schroeder <bryce.schroeder@...> wrote:

Did HP (or Tek, or anyone for that matter) make any oscilloscopes that were
basically analog scopes, but with the ability to digitize what is seen on
the display (at some lesser resolution than what you might be able to see
on the actual display, presumably)? As I understand it - which may
admittedly be incorrect - some of the older spectrum analyzers are sort of
like this.

So, this hypothetical oscilloscope type would basically have the analog
display "in parallel" with an ADC, such that you could look at the screen
and see the waveform displayed like an analog scope, or use the ADC to see
a digital approximation. (Presumably the digital stuff could also be used
to capture and store one-shot things like a regular digital oscilloscope.)
This would be opposed to a purely digital oscilloscope where the ADC and
memory is always between the signal and the display.

The reason for doing this, of course, would be that the analog display
would be "higher resolution" than the ability of the ADC, but the digital
stuff would enable automation and storage ability. This would stop being
important once digital was high-enough resolution to look more or less
indistinguishable to humans.

Did such "hybrid" oscilloscopes ever exist? If so, what are some model
numbers?

Thanks for your time - sorry if that was a bit lengthy.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Join [email protected] to automatically receive all group messages.