I've got some interesting equipment here including a 4-decade KV divider and a good ol' analog function generator with a voltage control input (primarily useful for modulation).
Well, I was thinking, here I've got this effectively super high-res pot, so I could have pretty high resolution control over the actual output frequency. Of course, given that there's no precision component of the system (the knob on the generator is low accuracy and not really calibrated or anything, the power supply to the KV divider isn't precisely known, and it wouldn't matter anyway since the VCF input is 0-10V, 1-1000x the dial setting).
So now I'm thinking it'd be neat if I could use an oscilloscope to precisely measure output frequency to dial it in. In theory, with 24Mpt memory, it SHOULD be possible to capture, say, those 24Mpts over one cycle of the output and measure frequency with high precision, but it seems on the Rigol I can't position cursors any wider than 1 window apart, I can't zoom back and forth through the capture.
Any thoughts on how to make this kind of a measurement? Besides the obvious, "buy a high precision frequency counter" - the point of the question is an oscilloscope measurement riddle.