I'm a bit reluctant to post this (after reading the 'newbies sticky') as there are a plethora of threads that involve discussions on Oscilloscope Isolation and Differential Probes. However, pushing forward...
I thought I knew what a differential probe was, and what it's limitations are, and that was why isolated input scopes were available. Many discussions though seem to imply (some in fact recommend) the use of a differential probe for making measurements with large (greater than 200v) floating references. I will abstain from the word "ground".
Many threads also ask for requirements from the OP. Often the OP complies, occasionally not. Here are mine...
- Ability to measure small voltages (50mV to 5v) with a common-mode offset of 300v to 600v.
- Ability to also measure large voltages (300v to 600v) with the same common-mode offset.
- Bandwidth of 500kHz minimum, 10MHz nice.
One application might be a solar inverter with multiple 400-600v DC solar input strings and a 240vAC output (at least one floating rail, 'high' currents, and very very lethal).
However, a better example of a circuit to probe would be a switch-mode power supply with an isolated secondary circuit. In such a circuit I might want to probe the BE drive voltage and simultaneously look at the CE voltage while also probing at least one point on the secondary side. BE is going to be pretty small, while CE is going to be pretty big.
I was under the impression that a differential probe could not do this - as soon as I want to look at a small signal (eg: the intricacies of the BE drive signal) the common-mode ability of the device smashes down to the order of tens of volts. To do this I thought my only option was an isolated input scope. But some threads I've read here seem to imply otherwise. And it seems manufacturers go out of their way to hide this sort of detail.
I started looking at 'isolator attachments' for scopes, and got disillusioned pretty quick.
- Elector designed an isolated adapter (single channel) 60kHz that needed a jumper to select 250mv/2.5v/25v input. I could maybe live with 60kHz for the price, but I've only seen one for sale on ebay, once, ever. Schematic available, but I've not found a layout. And it can't do high voltages.
- Micsig do a 2 channel isolated adapter 1MHz with 200:1. The attenuation factor makes it useless for small signals.
- And as for the fiber isolated probes from the likes of LeCroy and Tektronix. Big dollars - in the case of the Tek devices, the entry model (one channel) was more than the Cleverscope with four channels! (admittedly the isolation was better, but I really don't need tens of thousands of volts isolation!!)
I looked at differential probes, but I must still be missing something in how they operate...
- A multitude of manufacturers with prices to suit both hobbyist and government buyers!
- Circuit Cellar did a fairly good write-up/design of a differential probe. Again although they show the schematic, I've not been able to find the layout.
- MicSig have a small range, of which I thought the DP10007 could fit my scenario (10x)
- Siglent also have a differential probe (DPB4080), but the fact they also have the ISFE (isolation adapter) says that there MUST be a difference, and specific use cases for both. [What are they???]
So then I started looking at scopes with isolated inputs...
- MicSig, Tektronix, Cleverscope, Metrix (and no doubt more if I looked harder).
- Dave did a good teardown of the MicSig 300 series. Hopefully the build quality has improved since then.
- It would seem that for a "lower cost" option (under 5K), two channels is all that you can get.
- I really dislike the prevalence of buttons where knobs should be. It seems even the better devices (and higher end manufacturers) have all gone 'full button'!
- I was considering a second-hand Tek TPS2000 series (discontinued for some time), but the waveform update rate is horrible! At least it had knobs!
- The Tek THS3000 looks good with 4 channels, but has sadly gone 'full button'.
- I could even spring for a cleverscope (4 channels) at 10K (US dollahs), but needing a laptop/PC to run it puts me way off. Not only do you now have no knobs, but something else on a bench where things are already falling off the sides and back due to lack of room.
- I did really like that for all these I could ramp the sensitivity from often under 50mV/div to often over 50v/div. Not something I could do with either Isolating adapters or Differential Probes.
Regarding Differential Probes: I thought (take the MicSig DP10007 at 10x) the rating of max differential of 70v meant that the max common-mode offset was also 70v. But the faceplate of the Siglent says that at 10x the max differential is 80v with a common-mode of 800v. But it also seems to say that at 100x the max differential increases to 800v, but the common-mode stays the same at 800v? Does anyone have any pointers on how to use a differential probe for small voltages with large offsets? And how that differs from an isolated channel? An internet search does not return anything useful, although that might be the particular search terms I use - rephrase the question and the answer appears...
I did buy a MicSig STO1104 only a couple of months back to replace my now very old Tek 222, and I must say it is awesome! I like that it has knobs where knobs should be. The knobs (and buttons) are seamlessly integrated with the touchscreen - I honestly thought I might use the touchscreen once in a blue moon, but I use it a LOT. However, when I need to fine adjust a setting, there is nothing as good as a knob!
Serial decode, triggering options (including triggering serial), cursors, four channels, battery operated, truly portable, big colour screen... The only thing I miss (really miss) about my Tek222 is the isolated channels.
Cheers, MM.