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VEVOR Digital Oscilloscope, 1GS/S Sampling Rate, 100MHZ Bandwidth 2 Channels Portable Oscilloscope with 7-inch Color Screen, 30 Automatic Measurement Functions for Electronic Circuit Testing DIY

Customer Reviews for VEVOR Digital Oscilloscope, 1GS/S Sampling Rate, 100MHZ Bandwidth 2 Channels Portable Oscilloscope with 7-inch Color Screen, 30 Automatic Measurement Functions for Electronic Circuit Testing DIY

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Customer Reviews

28 Review(s)
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Ellis Gresham Ellis Gresham
A Good Purchase
Professional service and fast response time, quality product and packaging. I was pleasantly surprised by the quality of everything as everything was better than expected. Packaging was meticulous and everything looked even better than in the picture.
Edwina Robin Edwina Robin
Good quality and low price
I recommend it if you are looking for a nice, small, easy to use scope.
Porter Milne Porter Milne
Good function
This device had more abilities and functions than I imagined. It did exactly what I wanted it to do but is capable of so much more. I am still learning all of its functions. A great piece of equipment.
Elroy Elroy
Easy to operate
I liked that this product is easy to use.
Boris Rob Boris Rob
Shipping time
On-time delivery, good quality and service. love the local warehouse service
McLogan McLogan
A multimeter with an Oscilloscope function build in.
This is a very impressive device. It is basically a multimeter with a built in Oscilloscope function. It is very well made and looks sharp. It runs from three AA batteries included, and has a soft storage sack and tow test leads. The display is backlit and is a high resolution matrix type to display the readings and units. If in a voltage range you hold down a button and it switches to an Oscilloscope display. It does come with a fairly extensive 29 page manual that seems complete and well written and not some weird translated thing I have seen with other equipment. I have not gone through all of the functions yet to put it through all of its paces. This seems like a very good multimeter, and sometimes you really need to see a waveform to really know what is going on with more than a dc circuit. This gives you that capability in a single tool. Recommended.
viperstarpoint9 viperstarpoint9
Not bad.
I am not an electrician, electronics engineer, or even an hobbyist when it comes to tools like this, but I got this tool to help me find issues with my 3d printers, check unknown outlets, and to verify my work on 3d printers that I will be building. So far it's good enough for my amateur needs, and I am not expecting a high degree of accuracy with it.
Gary A. Donahue Gary A. Donahue
A Scope-Meter for $75? Yes Please! Although...
I was very excited when I saw this thing pop up so figured I'd give it a try. For reference I'm not an EE, but I build guitar tube-amps for fun, so having a non-mains oscilloscope is a great thing to have and of course a multimeter is always welcome. My first impression when taking it out of the box (and the bag, which is NOT a case and will not protect the meter from anything but minor scratches) is that the meter feels cheep. I handed it to my non-technical (but adorable) wife who commented without asking that, \"it feels like a toy\". One drop on a tile or cement floor and I imagine this thing is toast. This ain't no Fluke, but then a Fluke scope meter starts at $2000 so that's not a fair comparison. As a meter, it's fairly intuitive if you ever used a multimeter before. The dial sets your mode and you have different lead connections for high-amp current testing and for capacitor testing. No issues there. The readout is a bit unique with all of the main readout numbers being hollow and that seems like an odd \"form over function\" choice to me - make the numbers bold and obvious! For simple measurements this thing does the job, but then so does a $10 multimeter. How about the scope? The scope works. I hooked it up to my Agilent arbitrary waveform generator that has absolutely not been calibrated in probably 20 years, but that's not important because I'm not building satellites. That's when I hit the first snag. How do you enable the scope? There is no scope button, and absolutely no obvious way to start the scope, so I did what any man would do as a last ditch effort to get something working: I checked the manual. Ahh - hold down the R button for two seconds. Um. OK... now there's a scope. I set the Agilent and looked at the screen and saw a very tiny trace. How do I set the scale? No idea. How do I set the voltage range? No idea. How do I set it to auto? No idea. Oh wait - there are four function buttons and one of them is time. Nice! I am treated with three op

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