Yes. But only you can answer, is 20 MHz is enough? The more money you spend, the better equipment you can buy, and it won't end. Why stop at 20, 50, 100, 200, 500 Mhz etc? What stops me is in the projects I do and the skill and time to do them. When I read some of the errors or questions folks on eevblog who own a Rigol ask, I think they are buying more capacity than they know how to use.
I don't own the 5152, that's an early model Rigol, sadly it doesn't even have support information on Rigol's web site; but I don't think you can find a new, old stock, DSO for $210 delivered.
Note, 20 MHz, is its performance floor, where it works its best; above that you have to pay attention to issues that will cause aliasing, but given that you can push this scope beyond 20MHz particularly for repetitive waveforms, like say to examine the system clock. The Rigol or the Instek, likewise the performance floor is higher than the 5152, but you pay 2x more, but start worrying about aliasing at higher frequencies than the 5152, but how often will a project take you there?
We know for sure, technology just gets better with time, so in the future you can buy more for your money. Most MCU like the Arduino or PIC run at < 20 MHz.
The price you quote is ok, but the problem is delivery from Hongkong. There are many discussions you can read about experiences of folks buying from different people in China; I bought mine local in my country for the same money.
You might lose or get a broken Rigol scope, but its safer and a sure thing to buy the 5152, if the seller is local.
Thank you for you opinions.
So basically you say 5152 it's OK if it's very cheap. I found the 5152 for 209$ delivered.
I looked for the Instek 1062A and it's too much for me. But you gave bug in the head with the RIGOL DS1052E, Dave gave it good reviews, at least I see many informations and reviews on the web (I can't say that about 5152). It can be hacked to the 100Mhz just with the serial command. For me it's more expensive than I wanted to pay, but I see it could be the right choice. Dave described it as low cost, even its expensive for me I see that it belongs between real deals, not just the very cheap rubbish.
I noticed the 4ksamples mem of 5152 but as I said it will be my first scope I really can't imagine if it's the typical standard, or it will limit me badly. It's like selling oven with maximal temperature of 50 degree Celsius (122 Fahrenheit) to somebody who never cooked and can't imagine what that will mean for him.
So now I abandoned idea of 5152 and I'm thinking about the 1052E, it's for here 434$ delivered (but it's again honk kong ) . It's ok with the price? It's about double the price of 5152, but it will be worth it, right? (the 1052E will have much better use in the future than the 5152 which will work for me basically just now, with the AVR devices and the future is not so sure about it)
Best regards Anton.