Mixed-signal oscilloscope for test and debug of analog and digital signals offered by Rigol

Oct. 10, 2013
OAKWOOD VILLAGE, Ohio, 10 Oct. 2013. Rigol Technologies Inc. in Oakwood Village, Ohio, is introducing the MSO4000 series mixed-signal oscilloscope for signal analysis and digital decoding for testing and debugging of analog and digital signals.
OAKWOOD VILLAGE, Ohio, 10 Oct. 2013. Rigol Technologies Inc. in Oakwood Village, Ohio, is introducing the MSO4000 series mixed-signal oscilloscope for signal analysis and digital decoding for testing and debugging of analog and digital signals.

The test & measurement scope has 16 digital and as many as four analog channels at bandwidths ranging from 100 to 500 MHz. The MSO4000 has 28 megapoints per channel memory depth in each digital channel and 140 megapoints per channel in analog channels.

The device delivers sample rates of 1 gigasample per second digital and 4 gigasamples per second analog, and has a digital waveform capture rate of 85,000 waveform captures per second.

Rigol's UltraVision technology allows for real time waveform recording, replay, and analysis of as many as 200,000 frames (64,000 frames with digital), as well as a low noise floor with minimum analog vertical sensitivity measuring 1mV/div.

MSO4000 series supports serial bus triggers (standard) and decoding (optional) for analog and digital channels. The RPL2316 has a logic probe adaptor for high-speed digital measurements, and supports several logic levels.

The MSO4000 series also offers a 9-inch WVGA screen that has a 256-level intensity grading display, plus several trigger functions and several connectivity choices, including LAN (LXI-C), VGA, AUX, USB Host & Device, and USB-GPIB (optional).

For more information contact Rigol Technologies online at www.rigolna.com.

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John Keller | Editor

John Keller is editor-in-chief of Military & Aerospace Electronics magazine, which provides extensive coverage and analysis of enabling electronic and optoelectronic technologies in military, space, and commercial aviation applications. A member of the Military & Aerospace Electronics staff since the magazine's founding in 1989, Mr. Keller took over as chief editor in 1995.

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