🔍 Capture the Wave: Your Portable Lab Awaits!
The Aiteme Tablet Oscilloscope is a cutting-edge, ultra-thin device featuring a 7-inch display with 800 * 480 resolution. It boasts a 100MHz bandwidth and a 1GSa/s sampling rate, making it perfect for professionals on the go. With a robust 6000mAh battery, it offers up to 4 hours of continuous use. The oscilloscope supports advanced features like one-click waveform saving, a high measurement voltage range, and a powerful waveform manager, ensuring you have all the tools needed for precise analysis.
Manufacturer | Aiteme |
Part number | Ca-WM-03 |
Item Weight | 989 g |
Product Dimensions | 12.4 x 0.5 x 18.4 cm; 989 g |
Batteries | 2 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included) |
Item model number | Ca-WM-03 |
Style | ADS1013D Ⅱ |
Batteries Included? | Yes |
Batteries Required? | No |
Battery Cell Type | Lithium Ion |
S**W
Great unit for the money
Very capable unit. A little lacking on teh refinement but not costing too much either.The auto feature needs to be pressed before reading the result - it doesn't just keep working.Way better than the little units - the big screen is easy to see and makes it more intuitive.Nice add to the Lab bench.Would definitely buy it again.
A**
Delivery and Quality
Delivery was super quick, product quality is good too
A**R
Tablet 'Scope
Am surprised by the quality of this 'scope considering the price . Initially thought there was an issue on one channel due to inability to calibrate 'scope probe correctly , however replacing the supplied probe allowed calibration to be successful . Minor niggle are BNC skts placed close together making attaching probes a little tricky . Generally performs ok ,seems to be able to capture one off events well considering the sampling limits . Touch screen control of parameters is ok once familiar with the operation .
M**G
Very capable scope for the price!
I wanted a small, portable, battery-operated oscilloscope having reasonable performance at a reasonable price. This oscilloscope is much more than merely satisfactory! I could have bought more performance for less money with one of the units that uses a laptop PC as its host, display and power source, but I find that a very cumbersome arrangement for portable use. And most of the outboard units that use a PC do not protect the PC from over-voltage spikes and ground faults, from my viewpoint a crippling (and potentially expensive) deficiency.I read comments that indicated that packaging had been a problem for some buyers, so I made a point of buying my scope from Anmascop-US, a storefront in the US for the Chinese manufacturer that stocks items in the US. My unit arrived within a week, well packed and in perfect condition.This unit is sold under several different brand names, but the model number appears to always be ADS1013D-II. There are two versions available: the older ADS1013D has the probe connections projecting from the top edge of the case, while the ADS1013D-II has the probe connections inset into a well in the top edge of the case. The ADS1013D-II also has a shiny "picture frame" around the display screen. Price is about the same for the two versions, but it appears that the -II version that I bought has some updates.Like many offshore designs, the user manual requires some interpretation because the writer was clearly not a native speaker of English. However if you know how a conventional oscilloscope works, you can make sense of it after several readings and some experimentation. Also, you have to remember that a small device like this one has no space for knobs; all settings are made via the touch screen (which has VERY fast response) and thus you have to get used to operating it via that interface. A few settings are "hidden", in that there was no obvious way for the manufacturer to incorporate them. For example it took me awhile to understand that the time-base setting is adjusted up and down by tapping on the right and left sides of the screen.I was astonished to find that the two input channels use 12-bit converters; I had expected to find 8-bit resolution which would have been good enough for my needs. However testing against an adjustable DC supply, monitored by a 3 1/2 digit DVM, made it clear that the display is indeed 4000 counts from bottom to top and the trace on the screen does not reveal the 100 steps per division that careful testing indicates. The specifications are unclear about this, but the unit automatically handles + and - inputs with a seamless crossover as you would expect. The on-screen digital voltage readings indicated very good linearity and accuracy. And the display is very sharp and clear.Are there weak spots or missing features? Of course, what would you expect for $150? But for me they are not a problem. The biggest weakness is in triggering, and use of a common timebase. There is no external triggering input, and the two channels are driven from the same trigger; you select which channel, voltage level and direction. And for long timebase settings, the triggering is one-shot, not recurring. Since the two channels use the same timebase you can't trigger from one channel and then display the result on the other channel using a faster timebase setting. The approach for saving the waveform works OK but it wasn't clear from the instructions that tapping the saved image would add the annotation overlay that isn't shown on the thumbnails. The file saved to the PC is in a format that I haven't been able to open, but as long as a high-resolution screenshot "photo" is OK for your needs, no problem. The battery takes a long time to charge, and I suspect a higher-current adapter would be OK; 4 hours use time is great but 6 hours to charge isn't. The inset BNC connectors for the probes provide a sleek appearance but getting the probe connector for Channel 1 attached requires small fingers. And I would be astonished if the scope has anywhere near the 1GS/sec sampling performance listed in the specs. Each input appears to have a dual A/D converter and perhaps the timebases are "verniered" so that on a sampling basis you have 1GS/sec sampling. I'm not likely to ever need even as much as a 20MHz real-time capture, so don't anticipate a problem. And like any semiconductor A/D converter, be careful about input voltage. You're not applying the input to the grid of a tube that can handle over-voltage, as in my younger days with Tektronix scopes.I am glad I bought this scope!Martt
T**.
Small, portable, two probes, responsive, and good screen
Hard to beat this oscilloscope for the price/features. Easy to use, very good "first" scope. Was able to learn a lot about using a scope from this one. Have since gotten a Hantek but still keep this around/charged, for some uses it is a lot easier to pick up this one than the Hantek and as a portable scope it is VERY hard to beat. Still glad I have it, it holds a charge VERY well, and is perfect for simpler tasks. Clear/sharp/bright screen w/fast refresh rate.
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