This is it. The body of the probe houses all the essential data-acquisition electronics, and any post-processing and the waveform display are performed on PC. The scope only requires a USB 2.0 connection as it is USB-bus powered.
The spec:
- Vertical Resolution: 8bits
- Analog Bandwidth: 10 MHz
- Maximum Sampling Rate: 50 MS/s real-time
- Time Base: 10 ns/div to 50 s/div
- Buffer Size: 8k samples
- Probe: 1M Ohm, 20 pF, AC/DC coupling
- Voltage Ranges: ±100 mV to ±20 V in 1, 2, 5 V steps
- Accuracy: 3% (voltage) and 100 ppm (time)
- Connected and powered by USB
- 5 year warranty
Packaging: The scope came in a plain box,
which contains a scope storage bag and an intro-to-picoscope poster:
The scope is obviously in the bag along with Quick Start Guide, Software and Reference CD-ROM, and a bag of accessories.
The contents of the accessory bag:
The PicoScope Software installed smoothly on my PC and has been running hiccup free so far (Windows 7, Intel Core2Duo 3GHz, 4 GB memory). Here's a screen shot:
I find that the user interface is pretty straight forward and self-explanatory (that is, if you've used scopes in the past) based on my brief experience.
The body of the scope has 1 lighted button, which brings the start/stop control to the user's fingertip. Also, the button illuminates green (running) or red (not running) to indicate the scope's status:
As seen in the picture above, the probe tip is also lit, which helps tremendously to locate test points, IC legs, etc.
http://www.microtec.dk/contents/en-us/d40_PicoScope_USB-Oscilloscope_Kits.html
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