Oscilloscopes

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T3DSO1104HD
100MHZ 2GS/S PERCH 2GS/S INTERLE
Teledyne LeCroy
7
In Stock
1 : 2.604,07000 €
Box
Box
Active
Bench, Digital
100 MHz
4 Analog
LCD - Color (Touch)
USB
100Mpts
Record
Passive (1)
2G
50
3.5 ns
400V
100 ~ 240VAC
T3DSO1204HD
200MHZ 2GS/S PERCH 2GS/S INTERLE
Teledyne LeCroy
7
In Stock
1 : 3.100,69000 €
Box
Box
Active
Bench
200 MHz
4 Analog
LCD - Color (Touch)
USB
100Mpts
Record
Passive (1)
2G
50
3.5 ns
400V
100 ~ 240VAC
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Oscilloscopes


An oscilloscope (or o-scope) is a test device that provides a visual representation of an electrical signal over time. By plotting voltage on the Y axis against time on the X axis, it produces a waveform that reveals details such as amplitude, frequency, rise time, jitter, and peak-to-peak values. In simple terms, an oscilloscope acts like a high-speed camera for signals—capturing behavior that a digital multimeter cannot.

Oscilloscopes are widely used to observe, measure, and troubleshoot circuits, from simple sine waves to complex mixed-signal data. Engineers, technicians, and students still rely on them every day to validate designs, debug embedded systems, and analyze high-speed devices operating at MHz or even GHz bandwidths. Modern instruments such as digital storage oscilloscopes (DSOs) and mixed signal oscilloscopes (MSOs) provide advanced sampling rates, deep memory, and built-in measurement tools.

Unlike a digital multimeter, which excels at steady-state measurements of resistance, capacitance, inductance, and DC voltage, an oscilloscope allows you to see exactly how a signal changes in real time. This makes it possible to capture single-shot events, identify waveform distortions, and analyze high-frequency signals across multiple analog channels. Whether you need a basic oscilloscope for education or a high-end instrument with advanced features for professional testing, oscilloscopes remain one of the most important and versatile tools in electronics.