
7.8
At a Glance
0 VOutput Voltage
0 AMax Current
0 mVRipple & Noise
Best For
Hobbyists & MakersElectronics Engineers
Pros & Cons
Pros
- 100MHz bandwidth with 1GSa/s sample rate handles most hobby and moderate-speed digital signals
- 7-inch 800×480 TFT display — largest screen at this price point
- USB host + device ports: save screenshots to USB stick without a PC
- 25 automatic measurements (Vpp, frequency, rise time, duty cycle) without manual cursors
- Active community with custom firmware patches addressing UI quirks
Cons
- Trigger system requires careful configuration for complex serial protocols — no built-in serial decode
- Probe compensation adjustment is fiddly and not clearly documented in the manual
- Fan runs continuously at audible volume — not a quiet instrument
- Software update process requires USB boot; less polished than Rigol or Siglent equivalents
Hantek DSO5102P Digital Storage Oscilloscope 100MHz 2-Channel
Prices may change · Free shipping with Prime
Our Verdict
For a first oscilloscope under $200, the DSO5102P punches above its weight on screen size and bandwidth. Engineers needing I2C/SPI/UART decode should budget up to a Rigol DS1054Z; hobbyists measuring power supply ripple and basic waveforms will find this more than sufficient.
Hantek DSO5102P Digital Storage Oscilloscope 100MHz 2-Channel
$189
Prices may change · Free shipping with Prime
| Full Specifications | |
|---|---|
| Output Voltage | 0V |
| Max Current | 0A |
| Load Regulation | 0% |
| Line Regulation | 0% |
| Ripple & Noise | 0mV |
| Programmable | No |
| Channels | 2 |
| Display | 7-inch 800×480 TFT |
| Interface | USB |
| Dimensions | 310 × 155 × 130 mm |
| Weight | 2.3kg |
Compare With Similar Power Supplys
Head-to-Head Comparisons
Hantek DSO5102P Digital Storage Oscilloscope 100MHz 2-Channel
$189
Prices may change · Free shipping with Prime

