The DSO Nano is one of the products from Seeed Studio that I mentioned earlier.
And, again as I said earlier, the input voltage limitation isn't an issue, because you're supposed to use a scope with a X10 or X100 probe anyway. You just have to make sure that what you're buying has the standard input impedance of 1 meg in parallel with about 20pF, and any scope probe will work with it. (another reason NOT to buy the Iphone scope app, IMO, the audio input has an impedance of about 1k)
I had trouble with this when I bought my Tek 222A, not only does it have non-standard input connectors, but the input impedance is 330k / 66pF and the gain is 3 times what the readout says it is. I managed to build an adaptor for standard probes.
If you want the kind of build quality Fluke has, you have to pay for it, that's the bottom line. The Scopemeters start at a couple of grand. I've seen the old 50MS/s ones sell used for a few hundred, but the batteries are likely to be shot.
And, again as I said earlier, the input voltage limitation isn't an issue, because you're supposed to use a scope with a X10 or X100 probe anyway. You just have to make sure that what you're buying has the standard input impedance of 1 meg in parallel with about 20pF, and any scope probe will work with it. (another reason NOT to buy the Iphone scope app, IMO, the audio input has an impedance of about 1k)
I had trouble with this when I bought my Tek 222A, not only does it have non-standard input connectors, but the input impedance is 330k / 66pF and the gain is 3 times what the readout says it is. I managed to build an adaptor for standard probes.
If you want the kind of build quality Fluke has, you have to pay for it, that's the bottom line. The Scopemeters start at a couple of grand. I've seen the old 50MS/s ones sell used for a few hundred, but the batteries are likely to be shot.
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