Two oscilloscope teardowns

What is inside a modern oscilloscope?I have show what is inside Tektronix 220 scope. But what about some more modern digital oscilloscopes? Here are some interesting tear-downs I found from Internet. You might find interesting to see them also:

First I have found Rigol DS4014  100 MHz Digital Oscilloscope teardown video Rigol DS4014 Teardown. (for details on scope itself look at  review of a Rigol DS4014 4-channel digital scope). So look at the Rigol DS4014 Teardown:

Second interesting teardown is The One Million Dollar Scope Teardown: The Labmaster 10-100zi Oscilloscope is one of the fastest scopes in the world, coming in at a blistering speed of 100GHz with up to 240 Giga samples per second in real time. The scope is made by Teledyne LeCroy. Experiments and Teardown of the Teledyne LeCroy LabMaster 10-100zi 100GHz, 240GS/s Oscilloscope page takes you inside the Teledyne Lecroy factor, inside the scope itself and has an engineer describing the interleaving frequency technique that allows the lightning fast sample rates. So take a look at Experiments and Teardown of the Teledyne LeCroy LabMaster 10-100zi 100GHz, 240GS/s Oscilloscope video (this is 1.5 hour long video):

28 Comments

  1. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Taking Apart a Vintage Oscilloscope
    http://hackaday.com/2017/02/15/taking-apart-a-vintage-oscilloscope/

    After getting a power supply and a multimeter, the next piece of gear a hacker would want to add to their bench is the oscilloscope. Nowadays, even the cheapest ones cost a few hundred dollars yet pack in the features. At the other end of the scale, if you can pony up close to a million dollars, you can help yourself to an oscilloscope capable of 100 GHz bandwidth and 240 GS/s sampling rate. With that perspective, it becomes interesting to take a look at this video (embedded below), where [Jack Ganssle] shows us the Philco 7019 Junior Scope which was introduced way back in 1946.

    Episode 7 – An Oscilloscope from 1946 Can Still Teach Some Lessons
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkFddiu2Dvk

    Reply
  2. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Tektronix type 555 oscilloscope, over 100 tubes inside!
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BvbNBZX6kNE

    Tektronix Type 555 Dual Beam Oscilloscope with over 100 vacuum tubes. See if it works after all these years.

    Reply
  3. Tomi Engdahl says:

    ManCave 001 – Tektronix 2201 Oscilloscope Repair (Part 1) – Troubleshooting
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FQM_jubUEX0

    In this video Filip troubleshoots Tektronix 2201 Analogue and Digital Storage Oscilloscope without a service manual.

    Reply
  4. Tomi Engdahl says:

    #1 Tektronix 2213 Oscilloscope Repair
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=grUyjwyBDVc

    After getting my first oscilloscope I noticed that one of the channels don’t work, so I have to repair it.

    Reply
  5. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Rescued analog oscilloscope works fine, still has value
    http://www.edn.com/electronics-blogs/rowe-s-and-columns/4458052/Rescued-analog-oscilloscope-works-fine–still-has-value

    Who wouldn’t want to save an oscilloscope from destruction? It’s an LG OS-5020, 20 MHz, two-channel analog model in very good condition. Let’s see how well it works.

    The oscilloscope didn’t have probes. Fortunately, I have two 150 MHz passive probes plus some BNC cables to connect it to a function generator. The oscilloscope powered up (no boot time like a digital oscilloscope).

    The top parts of the signal are somewhat skewed and that skew differs from left to right. Indeed, the falling edges appear to occur in negative time.

    Correcting the “negative time” was easy. The oscilloscope’s trace needed to be rotated.

    Note: The VirtualBench oscilloscope’s bandwidth is 100 MHz and I had a 150 MHz passive probe. No problem? Not quite. The probe’s bandwidth at the 1× setting is rated at 6 MHz. Be aware of a probe’s greatly reduced bandwidth at the 1× setting. I used a BNC cable for most of these tests.

    Home> Community > Blogs > Rowe’s and Columns
    Rescued analog oscilloscope works fine, still has value
    Martin Rowe -February 28, 2017

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    A few weeks ago, my father-in-law called to say he found an oscilloscope. His neighbor was apparently going to put it in the trash so he asked if I wanted it. Of course I did. Who wouldn’t want to save an oscilloscope from destruction? It’s an LG OS-5020, 20 MHz, two-channel analog model in very good condition. Let’s see how well it works.

    The oscilloscope didn’t have probes. Fortunately, I have two 150 MHz passive probes plus some BNC cables to connect it to a function generator. The oscilloscope powered up (no boot time like a digital oscilloscope). I set it to CH1, adjusted the knobs and sure enough, a trace appeared. Now it was time to connect it to some signals and get out a lab notebook. Figure 1 shows the test setup, which consists of an HP34401A DMM and a National Instruments VirtualBench (computer for VirtualBench not shown).

    Figure 1 The oscilloscope under test, an HP34401A DMM, and a National Instruments VirtualBench (PC not shown) served as the test setup.

    For a first test, I went for the basics, DC and a 9V battery. Measuring the voltage on the DMM showed the battery at 8.368V. Connecting a probe to the battery showed a DC level (Figure 2) of what I’d call “pretty close” to that level.

    Figure 2 The LG oscilloscope shows a DC level when connected to a battery. The level is reasonably close to the value measured with a DMM.

    So far, so good. Next, I connected a probe to the LG’s calibration point, a 1 kHz square wave with an amplitude of 0.5 VP-P. Here’s a photo of the screen, taken with my phone (Figure 3). Yes, that’s the only way to get a screen image on an analog oscilloscope. At least I didn’t have to use a bulky Polaroid camera to get black-and-white photos like I once did.

    Figure 3 The oscilloscope screen shows its 1 kHz calibration signal.
    The top parts of the signal are somewhat skewed and that skew differs from left to right. Indeed, the falling edges appear to occur in negative time. For a sanity check, I connected the VitrualBench oscilloscope to the calibration point (Figure 4).

    Figure 4 The LG oscilloscope’s calibration signal looks properly aligned when viewed with the digital VirtualBench.

    Correcting the “negative time” was easy. The oscilloscope’s trace needed to be rotated. If you’re not familiar with analog oscilloscopes, remember that the trace on the screen comes from a beam that needs to align with the grid. That’s why this instrument has a trace rotation adjustment. Digital oscilloscopes don’t need that because there’s no beam, just illuminated pixels.

    Next, I set the VirtualBench function generator to produce a sine wave at 1 kHz, then compared the LG screen to the VirtualBench at frequencies up to 20 MHz, the function generator’s highest frequency. Figure 5 shows the LG screen with a 10 VP-P, 1 kHz sine wave (0.5 µs/div, 2 V/div, 1× probe). For the remainder of the tests, I connected the VirtualBench function generator to the LG oscilloscope through a BNC cable.

    Figure 5 A 10 VP-P, 1 kHz sine wave displays cleanly on the LG analog oscilloscope.
    That sine wave compares well to the VirtualBench display (Figure 6).

    Figure 6 The 1 kHz sine wave shown on the VirtualBench display shows that the analog oscilloscope is in pretty good shape.

    Next, I set the VirtualBench function generator’s frequency to 20 MHz, still at 10 VP-P. In Figure 7, you can see the drop in amplitude at the analog oscilloscope’s maximum frequency. Not shown are photos of the screen at frequencies of 1 MHz, 2 MHz, 5 MHz, 10 MHz, 15 MHz, 17 MHz, 18 MHz, and 19 MHz.

    Figure 7 At it’s full rated bandwidth, the LG analog oscilloscope shows the expected decreased sine wave’s amplitude.
    At 20 MHz, you can see the difference that oscilloscope bandwidth makes. In Figure 8, you can see the higher-bandwidth VirtualBench’s display of the 20 MHz sine wave.

    Figure 8 With a 20 MHz signal, the 100 MHz VirtualBench display doesn’t show the decreased amplitude seen on the 20 MHz LG oscilloscope.

    Note: The VirtualBench oscilloscope’s bandwidth is 100 MHz and I had a 150 MHz passive probe. No problem? Not quite. The probe’s bandwidth at the 1× setting is rated at 6 MHz. Be aware of a probe’s greatly reduced bandwidth at the 1× setting. I used a BNC cable for most of these tests.

    Just for fun, I tried a 5V, 1 MHz square wave (Figure 9). Both oscilloscopes showed some ringing on the signal’s rising and falling edges, possibly caused by parasitic capacitance on the connecting cable or perhaps an impedance mismatch from the function generator’s output to the oscilloscope’s input.

    Figure 9 A 5 MHz square wave has ringing on the rising and falling edges – on both the analog LG and digital VirtualBench oscilloscopes.
    Now what?

    Given that the LG oscilloscope was headed for destruction, it was a good save. It could use a calibration, but that’s about all.

    While keeping or selling the LG OS-5020 analog oscilloscope are options, I prefer to give it to a school or nonprofit maker space. I have contacted a local maker space and hopefully, they will take it. Check the comments for updates.

    Reply
  6. Tomi Engdahl says:

    EEVblog #521 – Picoscope 5000 USB Oscilloscope Teardown
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TM7HGFOc74M

    Reply
  7. Tomi Engdahl says:

    TSP #133 – Keysight UXR 110GHz BW, 256GS/s, 10-bit Real-Time Oscilloscope Teardown & Experiments
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DXYje2B04xE

    In this episode Shahriar takes a look at one of the most advanced electrical test and measurement instruments ever created. The Keysight UXR-Series Real-Time Oscilloscope brings 110GHz of analog bandwidth and 256GS/s real-time sampling at 4-channels simultaneously. To make it even more impressive, the entire data-conversion architecture is in 10-bits. This implies that the instruments captures, processes, stores and displays over 10Tb/s of information.

    Various architectures of state-of-the art oscilloscopes from Keysight, LeCroy and Tektronix are examined and compared against the new real-time architecture of the UXR-Series oscilloscope. The teardown of the front-end 110GHz module along with the data acquisition board is presented and analyzed in detail.

    Reply
  8. Tomi Engdahl says:

    EEVblog #1124 – Rigol 7000 Oscilloscope Teardown
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6AzXQ7sfYPU

    Inside the new Rigol 7000 Series oscilloscope with custom ASIC’s.
    Also a look at the bootloader code for potential hacks.

    Reply
  9. Tomi Engdahl says:

    TSP #133 – Keysight UXR 110GHz BW, 256GS/s, 10-bit Real-Time Oscilloscope Teardown & Experiments
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DXYje2B04xE

    Reply
  10. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Tearing Into a $1.3 Million Oscilloscope
    https://hackaday.com/2018/09/24/tearing-into-a-1-3-million-oscilloscope/

    Most hackers are rankled by those “Warranty Void If Broken” seals on the sides of new test equipment. Even if they’re illegal, they at least put the thought in your head that the space inside your new gear is off-limits, and that prevents you from taking a look at what’s inside. Simply unacceptable.

    [Shahriar] has no fear of such labels and tears into just about everything that comes across his bench. Including, most recently, a $1.3 million 110-GHz oscilloscope from Keysight. It’s a teardown that few of us will ever get the chance to do, and fewer still would be brave enough to attempt. Thankfully he does, and the teardown video below shows off the remarkable engineering that went into this monster.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DXYje2B04xE

    Reply
  11. Tomi Engdahl says:

    EEVblog #808 – Fluke 196 Scopemeter Repair
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ujy-0gRspUM

    Dave repairs a dumpster Fluke 196 Scopemeter handheld oscilloscope that has a faulty LCD screen.

    Reply
  12. Tomi Engdahl says:

    EEVblog #1146 – New Rigol MSO5000 Oscilloscope
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P5faiEUXbGg

    A teardown and quick look at the new lower cost mid-range 70-350MHz Phoenix chipset based Rigol MSO5000 mixed signal oscilloscope, to be release on the 13th Nov. Stating at US$909.

    How does it compare to the 7000 series scope just released 5 months ago?

    Reply
  13. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Inside A $30,000 8 GHz Scope
    https://hackaday.com/2020/07/29/inside-a-30000-8-ghz-scope/

    One of the best things about the Internet — especially the video part — is that you can get exposed to lots of things you might otherwise not be able to see. Take oscilloscopes, for example. If you were lucky, you might have one or two really nice instruments at work and you certainly weren’t going to be allowed to tear them open if they were working well. [The Signal Path], as a case in point, tears down a $30,000 MSO6 8 GHz oscilloscope.

    TSP #172 – Tektronix 6-Series 4-Channel 25GS/s 8GHz MSO Review, Teardown & Experiments (Part 1)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8WNuGUQStq8

    Reply
  14. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Even Xzibit Would Appreciate This Pimped Out, Liquid-Cooled $18K Oscilloscope
    YouTuber Zack Freedman pimped out an $18,000 Keysight oscilloscope with LEDs, Raspberry Pis, and liquid cooling. Xzibit would be proud.
    https://www.hackster.io/news/even-xzibit-would-appreciate-this-pimped-out-liquid-cooled-18k-oscilloscope-1536722378b5

    Reply
  15. Tomi Engdahl says:

    EEVblog #1355 – NEW Siglent SDS1104X-U $399 4CH Oscilloscope Teardown
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y6gzYbuMjOA

    Teardown of the new $399 Siglent SDS_1104X-U Four Channel oscilloscope.
    A cheaper alternative to the SDS1104X-E
    And what’s all this magnetic shielding stuff anyhow?

    “Low cost” = $400

    Reply
  16. Tomi Engdahl says:

    EEVblog 1477 – TEARDOWN! – NEW Tektronix 2 Series Oscilloscope
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R2fw2g6WFbg

    Detailed teardown of the new generation Tektronix 2 Series MSO bench/portable battery powered oscilloscope!
    An innovative new design form factor you’re either going to love or hate!
    This is the upgrade to the 15yo MSO/DPO 2000B series to give a low end on the next generation 2/3/4/5/6 series. It uses the new Lexington scope architecture that is different to the 3 and above series.

    00:00 – Teardown of the new Tektronix 2 Series Oscilloscope
    00:39 – The stand is a thing of beauty and a joy forever
    01:13 – The tablet-like form factor and VESA mount & design decisions
    02:55 – Teardown – PCB design driving the case design
    05:03 – Was there room for real buttons?
    06:12 – The power and grounding interface and why is it on the side?
    07:51 – Was there room for an internal battery pack?
    08:35 – The VESA mount
    09:28 – Back side of the analog front end
    13:12 – True single PCB design
    15:07 – Don’t forget your knobs!
    15:40 – Internal fans
    16:37 – BNC interface
    18:32 – One-piece metal chassis and heatsink design
    18:59 – The PCB
    21:59 – The Tek026 analog front end revealed
    23:49 – DaveHead commentary and closer look at the bottom side PCB
    26:26 – Top side PCB commentary
    26:42 – Custom Tek Arg Gen ASIC ADG395C
    27:23 – FPGA BGA thermal expansion glue
    28:06 – Xilinx ZYNQ UltraScale+ FPGA
    29:02 – The Lexington architecture block diagram
    31:18 – Why so much sample memory?
    32:38 – Product positioning and crippling
    34:47 – The ADC – It’s NOT the Tek049
    37:29 – Trigger input, PLL, and Battery input switching
    38:24 – Digital Inputs
    39:24 – External battery pack teardown
    43:00 – Playing with the funky stand

    Reply
  17. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Cheap Oscilloscope Is… Well… Cheap
    https://hackaday.com/2022/06/07/cheap-oscilloscope-is-well-cheap/

    We always enjoy watching [Kerry Wong] put an oscilloscope through its paces. His recent video is looking at a very inexpensive FNIRSI 1014D ‘scope that you can also find rebranded. You can usually find these for well under $200 at the usual places. Can you get a reasonable scope for that cost? [Kerry] has a list of issues with the scope ranging from short memory depth to low sensitivity. He did, however, like that it is USB powered so it can be operated from a common battery pack, which would make it truly floating.

    Review/Teardown of a FNIRSI 1014D DSO – 100 MHz or 30 MHz Bandwidth?
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQKuHJELEOs

    Reply
  18. Tomi Engdahl says:

    https://etn.fi/index.php/13-news/13685-skooppi-kutistui-tabletiksi

    Kannettavista testereistä on puhuttu jo vuosikausia, mutta Tektronix vie idean oikeastaan ensimmäisenä maaliin. Uusi Series 2 -oskilloskooppi on käytännössä tabletin kokoinen, alle 1,8 kiloa painava ja van 38 millin paksuinen täysiverinen mittauslaite.

    Reply
  19. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Review/Teardown of a FNIRSI 1014D DSO – 100 MHz or 30 MHz Bandwidth?
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQKuHJELEOs

    By popular request, I did a review and teardown of a FNIRSI 1014D digital storage oscilloscope. You can also find the exact same scope under the Yeapook brand (ADS1014D). Although it is advertised as a 100MHz bandwidth scope, in reality the bandwidth is just at around 30MHz. This along with other issues (e.g. low memory depth, low input sensitivity, display artifacts, etc.) makes it hard to justify getting this scope even with the rock bottom price.

    00:00 Introduction
    02:45 Functional testing
    06:10 Bandwidth measurements
    11:31 Rise time testing
    12:17 AM/FM modulation, Lissajous figure
    13:11 Builtin function generator
    14:49 Teardown
    16:25 Conclusions

    Reply
  20. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Review/Teardown of a Hantek DSO2D10 Oscilloscope – It Has Builtin AWG, Does Protocol Decoding Too!
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mmx7eo9STXE

    I did a detailed review and teardown of a Hantek DSO2D10 oscilloscope. Check it out on Banggood: https://ban.ggood.vip/Zu2N use coupon code BGd2e0cc for additional savings (expires on 9/30).

    00:00 Introduction
    03:10 Power on time, features
    05:08 Test signal
    06:26 System information, it’s Linux based!
    07:50 Arbitrary waveform generator, AM/FM modulation
    12:23 Waveform editor software
    15:30 Keysight Interactive IO, SCPI
    16:46 Virtual Oscilloscope software
    17:28 Memory depth
    20:45 Protocol decoding, triggering capability
    24:22 Bandwidth testing
    27:31 Rise time measurement
    29:15 X-Y Mode, DVM
    30:58 Teardown
    36:19 Conclusion

    Reply
  21. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Everything you need to know when buying/using an Oscilloscope! EB#49
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d58GzhXKKG8

    In this electronics basics episode we will be having a look at the biggest mistake you can do when working with an oscilloscope. But I will not only show you how to do safe mains voltage measurements but also show you all the basics when it comes to oscilloscopes. That means I will show you how to choose one, how to do simple voltage and current measurements and finally how FFT works. I will explain passive probes, triggering, voltage & time division, measuring functions, the cursor function, AC & DC coupling and single mode capturing. Let’s get started!

    0:00 The big mistake when using an oscilloscope
    1:08 Intro
    2:02 How to choose a scope?
    4:44 Passive probes & scaling factor
    5:55 Trigger
    6:41 Voltage division
    7:11 Time division
    7:37 Measure function
    7:47 Cursor function
    8:19 AC & DC coupling
    9:08 Single mode capturing
    9:36 Current measurement
    10:16 Safe mains voltage measurement
    11:37 Differential probe
    11:52 Math & FFT

    Reply
  22. Tomi Engdahl says:

    EEVblog #1317 – $140 2CH 100MHz Fnirsi Tablet Oscilloscope Review
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5iwtDwJlbWk

    $140 for a 2CH 100MHz 1GS/s tablet oscilloscope?
    Review of the $140 FNIRSI-1013D 2CH 100MHz 1GS/s tablet oscilloscope.
    Is it too good to be true?

    EEVblog #1260 – $70 100MHz Oscilloscope?
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SIH48bIUU00

    Reply
  23. Tomi Engdahl says:

    EEVblog 1510 – $699 Rigol 12bit HDO1000 Teardown – WOAH!
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qEpkVa_ysaw

    HUGE SURPRISE inside the new low end $699 Rigol 12bit low noise HDO1000 oscilloscope!
    Hacking forum thread:
    https://www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/hacking-the-hdo1khdo4k-rigol-12-bit-scope/

    Reply
  24. Tomi Engdahl says:

    EEVblog #675 – How To Reverse Engineer A Rigol DS1054Z
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lJVrTV_BeGg&t=1519s

    Dave shows you how to reverse engineer a PCB to get the schematic. In this case the new Rigol DS1054Z oscilloscope.
    How does the discrete transistor analog front end and the software bandwidth limiting work?
    How do you decode SMD transistor codes?
    How does it compare to the old Rigol DS1052E?
    Dave also discusses the low voltage ohms function of a mulitmeter, how it’s useful, and how to test your multimeter to see if it will have any issues with in-circuit testing.

    http://rigol.codenaschen.de/index.php/Schematics

    Reply
  25. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Rigol HDO1000 Serial Boot Capture for Hack + R&S MXO4 play
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p-eLu1z7-cs

    Reply
  26. Tomi Engdahl says:

    FNIRSI 1013D teardown and mini review – A portable oscilloscope based on Allwinner CPU & Anlogic FGPA
    The FNIRSI 1013D is a dual-channel flat-panel oscilloscope with a rich set of features. It is cost-effective and useful to people in the maintenance and R&D industries. Although it has been on the market for a few years, I purchased one, and I decided to introduce it and disassemble it to check out the hardware design.
    https://www.cnx-software.com/2022/11/16/fnirsi-1013d-teardown-and-mini-review-a-portable-oscilloscope-based-on-allwinner-cpu-anlogic-fgpa/

    Reply

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