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Rigol DS1054Z Digital Oscilloscopes - Bandwidth: 50 MHz, Channels: 4 Serial Decode Included

  • Based on 672 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by RIGOL Official Store

Arrives May 4 – May 5
Order within 5 hours and 25 minutes
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Features

  • 50 MHz Digital Oscilloscope with 4 channels plus 24 Mpt memory and 1 GSa/sec sampling
  • The Number 1 Selling Oscilloscope 4 Years Running!
  • 4 Channels, 50 MHz Bandwidth
  • Now includes FREE software bundle BND-MSO/DS1000Z built into the unit
  • UltraVision: Deeper memory 24Mpts included

Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 13 x 7 x 5 inches; 6.6 Pounds


Item model number ‏ : ‎ DS1054Z


Date First Available ‏ : ‎ August 26, 2014


Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Rigol


Best Sellers Rank: #70,266 in Industrial & Scientific (See Top 100 in Industrial & Scientific) #38 in Lab Oscilloscopes


#38 in Lab Oscilloscopes:


Customer Reviews: 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 672 ratings


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: May 4 – May 5

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Excellent for the price, tons of features, a little weak in some areas
Excellent for the price. You won't find a much better brand-new 4-channel digital oscilloscope for the price, as of 2016. There is some decent competition from even newer players (such as Siglent), possibly with better specs according to EEVblog, but there are also a lot of bugs and other issues with some of them. I'd definitely consider the competition, but I feel that Rigol has really established itself as a solid brand. If you have ever used any oscilloscope, I'd say that the DS1054Z is actually very intuitive. I watched a few videos online of people explaining all the features first (again, mainly from EEVblog), and then spent some time with it myself, and 99% of it is pretty much self-explanatory. The number of buttons and functions was daunting at first, but it really didn't take long to learn. It's a huge improvement in every way over the only slightly cheaper and much older DS1052E. The screen is great: it's large, bright, and features a signal intensity setting similar to analog scopes. The sample rate and memory are quite high for the price. It can be upgraded to 100mhz, it has numerous trigger modes, and just in general has tons of features. Also this device is just tiny compared to the old analog scopes I used in school. Those things weighed 50+lbs and a couple feet deep. The Rigol is about a foot wide, 4 inches deep, and 6 inches tall. Technology just amazes me sometimes. Cons that I've found thus far: High-ish noise floor. Very weak signals will get swallowed up. It also has some internal noise in the MHz range that shows up. You'll have to learn what it looks like and ignore it if you are going to be analyzing higher frequencies. Of course, it's not really a spectrum analyzer, it's an oscilloscope. The main problem that I have with it is the awful FFT. Now, having an FFT in a low-end scope like this is pretty great, don't get me wrong. But, from what I've read, the FFT count is something like 600. Higher end scopes can have FFTs going up to ~130000 count or more. The low count means that you get very little information from your FFT, and you can't really trust it. Frequencies can just slip through the cracks, so to speak. A firmware update (which seems to be included with the units sold through this listing) includes a memory mode, which accumulates a lot more data points and draws a much better FFT chart, but it's still not amazing. For higher frequencies, you can also get some free computer software written by another Rigol owner, but it's a little bit of trouble to set up if you don't know what you're doing. The software does a decent job of gathering data from the scope over USB and performing an FFT on your computer's CPU, instead of relying on the scope itself to do the heavy lifting. The triggers are also a little finicky at times. More expensive scopes seem to have better triggering than this one, but I can usually get it to stabilize relatively well by playing with the trigger setting a bit. I do wish it had a built-in arbitrary waveform generator, but again that's a higher-end scope feature. It's definitely something that they could consider in future versions of their low-end scopes, though. Despite all this, I give it 5 stars, because Rigol seem genuinely dedicated to improving their scopes through firmware updates, and because it's so cheap that it'd be silly to expect more than it already delivers. It's a solid low-end scope. It's great for simpler uses, and can suffice in a pinch for more complex ones. It'd be great for educational use, home use, etc. Just look at what similar scopes from the more 'respected' brands cost and compare. We're talking somewhere in the realm of 5x the price or more for their lower-end scopes. Let me put it this way: I would have never been able to afford a scope this nice for this price before Rigol and some of their competition came along. I bought a semi-portable digital scope for field work w/a monochrome display in 2003 for $500 and it has little more to it beyond a waveform display. No triggers, no cursors, no math functions. Everything had to be eyeballed and hand-calculated. This Rigol scope is orders of magnitude more powerful, better in every way except it's slightly less portable and slightly larger, and yet it costs less. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on October 7, 2016 by Chuck

  • Excellent Hobbyist Oscilloscope!
This is an awesome hobbyist Oscilloscope! One could spend a practically unlimited amount of money on an oscilloscope. I wanted something good at a reasonable price. I think most of the Rigols sold are from the TEquipment folks. I really like that this one has Ethernet, USB, 4 channels, relatively good bandwidth for my needs. Be sure to visit eevblog to learn more, there's a large thread of information there. There are a TON of cool features: triggers, storage, and more! It comes with 30 hours of "evaluation" software (that's equipment "on" time, not clock time) but supposedly there are some hacks for that. I've not actually tried them yet. Update to the latest software - released in October of 2015 - installed easily. I did have a problem with some of my older USB sticks not working, so be sure to read the docs on USB flash drives. The only thing I really don't like about it: the fan is rather noisy. It is not a grinding, old-bathroom-fan noisy, but just a loud white-noise kind of sound. Not terrible, but not great. I suppose the screen could be a bit bigger, too (I think they should have added an HDMI connection!) But overall I am completely happy with this oscilloscope. Technology has come a long way since the days of my old, simple dual trace Tektronix from years back. And yes - it was a difficult decision to not go with another Tektronix. I had also looked at the Tektronix 1052B 50 MHz, 2 Channel, Digital Oscilloscope, 1 GS/s Sampling, 5-year Warranty - higher bandwidth, but just 2 channels (do you really need 4?) - but price / performance, this unit simply cannot be beat! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 7, 2015 by Tafca. (Tabarini Fan, Côte d'Azur)

  • Affordable and Impressive Entry Level scope
Revised my prior review. This is an affordable yet robust entry level scope that is upgradable. I gave it 5 stars because what you get significantly outweighs the shortcomings. But understand a few things. 1. The the cooling fan creates a lot of noise. But if you’re looking into buying one of these things then you probably know enough to competently open the device - at your own risk - and replacing and/or shielding it better. 2. Not the best probes but certainly not the worst. Maybe I got a bad batch but mine are obnoxiously difficult to tune. Again, this is an impressive device for the price so you have to accept the tradeoff to be fair. The $5000 analog scopes I recall using in undergrad couldn’t do half of the things this is capable of and took up twice the bench top real estate. 3. It’s a bit slow at times to trigger but again. This is easily one of the ‘highest-end-budget-scopes’ … at least available on Amazon. If anyone from Rigol is reading this please also consider making a detailed series [See Keystone] on how to use this scope. There are a lot of reviews, and many videos on oscilloscopes readily available, however there is something left to be desired on practical ways to use the versatility of this scope for more intermediate and advanced folks. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 18, 2023 by Mo Rutherford

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