First of all I'm pretty amateur when it comes to scopes. All my previous experience has been with a computer based pico scope.
Recently I bought a Siglent 1104X-E and at longer times bases it seems to bog down a lot and say "Acquiring" and it takes forever to see the waveform...see the pic.
When I was looking at a slow waveform on the picoscope I'd increase the time base in order to see it and then I'd lower the sample rate way down and it'd run just fine.
What am I missing here?
Hi,
What means "forever" ?
It´s frozen ?
Well once I turn up the time base to over 200ms it says "acquiring" over and over then finally after like 10-15 seconds I'll see something on the screen but it's not in real time. Does that make sense?
For example, I was looking at a rotary encoder and needed a long time base to see the signal. I turn the knob of the rotary encoder. The scope says "acquiring" then like 10-15 seconds later I finally see the square wave (see pic below). Also I doubt this matters but I am running the latest firmware on the scope. Why am I bogging down the scope so much. I think it auto adjusts sample size. What am I doing that is so demanding on the scope. All I'm trying to do is look at a relatively slow square wave.
Roll mode of which there are 2 types, Auto and dedicated.
At slow timebase setting the Roll button allows you to switch between each type.
Take the time to try both and know how they each work.
tautech thank you!!! I was going crazy lol. A pico scope is literally always in roll mode so I didn't realize that I needed to manually set the siglent to that to see longer waveforms.
tautech thank you!!! I was going crazy lol. A pico scope is literally always in roll mode so I didn't realize that I needed to manually set the siglent to that to see longer waveforms.
'It' can see the waveforms in either Roll mode, they just work differently.
In Auto mode a full screen width of data relative to the timebase setting is acquired before anything is sent from the buffer to the display. A little math on timebase setting * 14 div will give you the time before the full capture is displayed and then the display is continually updated at that 'time'/div rate.
Each has their advantages depending on what you need to do. The only thing to spirit away into gray matter is Roll mode starts at 50ms/div and slower timebase settings.
Wow that makes a lot of sense to me now...and just tried the roll mode and it is working perfect. Thanks again!!!