Four-channel 12-bit digital oscilloscope series offers an attractive price/performance

15-05-2025 | Saelig | Test & Measurement

Saelig Company, Inc. now offers the RIGOL MHO2000 series – the new generation of four-channel high-resolution, mixed signal digital oscilloscopes based on the Centaurus platform. It provides 12-bit resolution (up to 16-bit in high-res mode), bandwidths up to 350MHz, four analog channels, and 16 digital channels for debugging with an optional probe.

The 200MHz MHO2024 and the 350MHz MHO2034 oscilloscopes are designed with a 2GSa/s sampling rate for all channels at 12-bit vertical resolution, with a waveform capture rate of up to 1,000,000 wfms/s. Internal memory of up to 500Mpts allows drilling down to fine details in waveform captures. An integrated two-channel 50MHz AWG is also optionally available.

The series features automatic measurements for up to 41 parameters, statistics, XY cursors, a Pass/Fail function with hardware mask, a six-digit frequency counter, and an integrated DVM. Advanced software options include Power analysis, Automotive bus trigger/decoding (CAN-FD, LIN), avionics bus trigger/decoding (MIL-STD-1553), FlexRay trigger/decoding, and audio bus trigger/decoding (I2S).

The device features:

  • 12-bit vertical resolution (up to 16-bit in high-res mode)
  • Bandwidth: 200MHz (MHO2024), 350MHz (MHO2034)
  • Four analog channels + 1 EXT, 16 digital channels (with optional probe)
  • Sampling rate: up to 2GSa/s
  • Arbitrary waveform generators (2x 50MHz, optional)
  • Power analysis (optional), histogram, Bode plot, protocol decoding
  • 10.1” touch screen 1280x800 pixels
  • 256-level digital intensity display, digital fluorescence technology
  • Up to 1,000,000 wfms/s in fast recording mode
  • Connectivity: USB Host/Device, LAN, HDMI

The MHO2000 digital oscilloscope series is created to satisfy advanced design, debugging, and test demands at an attractive price.

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By Nigel Seymour

Nigel has worked in the advertising and magazine publishing industry for many years prior to helping publish articles in the early years of Electropages. He has worked with technical agencies producing documents and artwork for the web over the last few years. He has been products editor for Electropages for over five years.