No sad story here.
At the moment i don't have one and need to borrow a Tek TDS2012 (where i had to fix the PSU 2 times alr) from the company i work at.
So i could realy use the scope
Edit: And thanks to Dave for giving such valuable stuff away
Thanks for the giveaway - always fun to participate
Hey
Daniel@Keysight - how about chipping in additional two channels? ... just for good measure? (I know: no discussions here)
@Sob story - I still don't have a signal-gen... but I bet some aspiring student doesn't even have an old scope - your personal pick should better go to such a person instead of me
i'm in this draw too, for the lucky one. i'f i have to steer the choice in a rational way, i could use it for FPGA debugging purposes, i like those Lattice iCE40 the open sourced ones!
Here is my once-and-once-only reply to this thread.
Count me in - been watching eevblog forever and finally picked up a rigol a couple years back, but had to sell it due to medical issues. I miss having a scope hehe
Edit: darn, I just realized I only have 35 posts, thought I had more
Dave might remember me as Carlos's buddy that looked into all those statistics regarding the "cheating" of the video contest that one year
A well known brand name DSO will make me happy Dave.
Not enough posts, but worth a try...
Support a poor EE student
Greetings from Jay_Diddy_B
I a min. It's about time I win such a thing, I never won anything!
Chris
Maybe it sounds cheesy but I will share it anyway (since it's the truth)
I am taking the plunge and I have decided to start a full-time freelance business but unfortunately my financial situation isn't going so well at the moment.
Since my field is mainly developing Class-D power amplifiers and switching power supplies, I could really use a 100MHz (or better) scope with 4 channels.
Unfortunately these are not cheap, so many of my projects are on hold for the moment which also means that development and sales are on hold as well.
Needless to say that this would help me tremendously.
Very generous of you Dave, as always!
You could also just sell these for a fair amount on ebay instead.
Interesting, I do not have many posts on the forum. I'd like to have an oscilloscope to learn more about electronics. Unfortunately the equipment costs a lot and I can not afford it.
Although I studied computer science, I'm becoming more and more interested in electronics. Perhaps I chose the wrong path.
Slowly I'm creating a small set of tools, I recently bought a real (but small) soldering station!
Next step is to buy a couple of multimeters!
For now my knowledge stops at the logical gates and something on the Opamps.
Nicolò
Count me in as well! As for the sob story, none here but as a beginner I could definitely use a scope to replace the cheap DIY kit that I threw together.
ONCE and ONCE ONLY,
@sob story - well who needs scope when you have LEDs
I would be really happy to win one scope because i currently have nothing(only a logic analyzer, a dmm and a cc cv buck converter for a bench power supply)
I would really love to win this scope!
As you can see all four channels of my scope have busted
Cheers and congrats to who ever wins!
i just bought my first scope, a dso138, so i feel bad for wanting this
but i would love the upgrade thou
this would be helpful to complete my college project for sure, awesome giveaway
I dont have many posts because I mostly read and learn stuff from here, but I registered a while ago not for this event
I would like to help you clear your dumpster!
Big project is recycling an old grand piano and adding a bunch of sensors to connect to a software piano on my computer. The on-board paino sensors, multiplexers, and brian will need to be very low lantency and very low jitter. Colleague in Bulgaria is trying the same!
Thanks Dave & Keysight.
My post count is still below your expectation, but there's nothing wrong with trying, right?
But, Dave... DSOX110
2G is two channel scope. None in the X1000 series is 4 channel. Or is this the super sekrit special edition 4 channel version that nobody knows yet?
Dave...?