On Nov 14, 1:05Â pm, n...@puntnl.niks (Nico Coesel) wrote:
> Bill Sloman <
bill.slo...@ieee.org> wrote:
> >On Nov 14, 4:43=A0am, John Larkin <
jlar...@highlandtechnology.com>
> >wrote:
> >> They require membership and passwords and logins to see even basic
> >> stuff like scope specs. And if you do try to register, they whine that
> >> your password is insufficiently strong.
>
> >> No more Tek! I'm buying Agilent and Rigol, who actually want to sell
> >> stuff.
>
> >Of course Tek scopes used to be better than Agilent's (not to mention
> >Rigol's) and easier to use, so you may be condemning yourself and you
> >employees to years of inconvenience to save a minute of work on a web-
> >site, but that's your choice.
>
> Thats a weird statement. Agilent, Rigol and Tektronix have been in
> business long enough to figure out what their customers want in a
> scope and how it should work.
You could have said that about Tektronix and Agilent (then called HP)
back in the late 1980's when we have to choose between a top end HP
scope and it's Tektronix equivalent. the specifications were pretty
much the same, but the Tek scope triggered lot more reliably on the
signal edge that we actually wanted to look at. Both Tek and HP wanted
the sale so we have both for trial periods of a couple of weeks.
Nobody voted for the HP machine.
> I've used scopes from Agilent and
> Tektronix and I didn't find either difficult to use. Some are better
> than others though. For instance I wouldn't want to have a Tek TDS200,
> TDS1000 or TDS2000 series scope because of their ridiculously short
> memory.
I've not used any of them ... in subsequent jobs, the choice always
went for something cheap, but with a deep digital memory so that you
could grab a couple of seconds worth of transient and look at it
repeatedly in detail.
--
Bill Sloman, Sydney