Hey,
I'm fairly new to the electronics scene and was wondering what the minimum specs for an oscilloscope would be if i needed to look at raspberry pi spi transactions?
thanks.
Hey,
I'm fairly new to the electronics scene and was wondering what the minimum specs for an oscilloscope would be if i needed to look at raspberry pi spi transactions?
thanks.
To avoid aliasing (introduction of elements not present In the original signal and loss of information desired) you need to sample at twice the maximum frequency of the signal of interest.
To avoid aliasing (introduction of elements not present In the original signal and loss of information desired) you need to sample at twice the maximum frequency of the signal of interest.
But in order to see anything useful you need to sample at 10x the frequency.
So mid to high end scopes do just that - and average several samples when you are working at lower frequencies to make the 8 bit ADC look more like a 10 bitter.
MK
What Michael says is correct, especially for digital signals to get a reasonably accurate look at rise/fall times and other critical timing. I have an old (but nice)
Tektronix TDS 1012 100MHz, 1 Gs/s two channel w/external trigger digital scope that I bought for exactly that reason. The main drawbacks to the scope is a
small buffer (2.5K samples), and it is only two channels. 4 channel and 200 MHz (2 Gs/s) models also exist. The TDS 1012 was around $1200 USD when I
bought it and I still consider it a good investment although I do wish now that I had sprung for the 4 channel 200 MHz model.