Author Topic: Fluke 95 Oscilloscope Sampling  (Read 4507 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Tony RTopic starter

  • Regular Contributor
  • *
  • Posts: 117
  • Country: 00
Fluke 95 Oscilloscope Sampling
« on: September 25, 2011, 02:22:59 pm »
So i was browsing the pages of ebay and i found an add that got me a little confused and hope some of you guys can help clear it up for me

I found a Fluke 95 50 Mhz hand held scopemeter. in the add it stated "*** 50 Mhz Dual Channel *** 25 Megasamples/second ***"

Now when taking signals and systems i was always told that your sampling frequency must be at least twice the frequency of the signal you want to sample so fs>= 2*f.

So if this is sampling 25 million times a second, how can it be rated for 50 MHz waves?
Tony R.
Computer Engineering Student
Focus: Embedded Assembly Programming, Realtime Systems,  IEEE Student Member
 

Offline Zero999

  • Super Contributor
  • ***
  • Posts: 19494
  • Country: gb
  • 0999
Re: Fluke 95 Oscilloscope Sampling
« Reply #1 on: September 25, 2011, 02:32:16 pm »
It'd possible to have a higher analogue bandwidth than double the sample rate for repetitive waveforms.
 

Alex

  • Guest
Re: Fluke 95 Oscilloscope Sampling
« Reply #2 on: September 25, 2011, 02:35:34 pm »
Ahh, used to have that one!

Sure, look up equivalent time sampling. Here is a dcent app note:

http://www2.tek.com/cmswpt/tidetails.lotr?ct=TI&cs=Application+Note&ci=14295&lc=EN
 

Offline saturation

  • Super Contributor
  • ***
  • Posts: 4787
  • Country: us
  • Doveryai, no proveryai
    • NIST
Re: Fluke 95 Oscilloscope Sampling
« Reply #3 on: September 26, 2011, 10:51:12 am »
2x is minimum, realistically its 10x.  So that scope is effectively 2.5 MHz worse case, in single shot applications.
Best Wishes,

 Saturation
 


Share me

Digg  Facebook  SlashDot  Delicious  Technorati  Twitter  Google  Yahoo
Smf