Posted by Matthew
If you know me on a more personal basis, then you know that I have been experiencing some issues with several projects/articles in the works for this site. Up until now, I did not have my own oscilloscope. Usually I am able to make due, but recently it has been making things harder than it is worth.
After some research I happened to find a deal on a new Instek GDS-820C DSO. The offer was impossible to refuse and cheaper than the GDS-805C. Besides the obvious increase in sample rate, the GDS-820C comes standard with USB and parallel ports along with the RS-232 port, but GBIP is still only an option. These digital storage options will allow me to post pretty pictures on the blog!

This oscilloscope samples at 100MSamp/sec and is capable of 150mHz operation. They claim an ‘effective’ sampling rate of 25GSamp/sec when viewing repetitive signals. In comparison, Tektronix base model samples at rates up to 1GSamp/sec.
At 150mHz it will be hard to see much if the signals are not repetitive! If you know anything about Shannon’s Sampling Theorem, the effective sampling rate makes 150mHz operation seem… possible. Without this hack, the scope would be limited to half the sampling frequency or 50mHz. I could have paid more for a Tektronix scope, but the hardware would have been limited to 40mHz, mono anyway. This will suit my needs.
Update: If you view a signal sampled at over 100MSamp/sec, then you can tell it is making due with the effective sampling rate. I am not sure if this really matters because I do not have access to signal over a MHz at the moment.

