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YEAPOOK ADS1013D Handheld Digital Tablet oscilloscope Portable Storage Oscilloscope Kit with 2 Channels, 100Mhz Bandwidth, 1GSa/s Sampling Rate 7" TFT LCD Touch Screen (ADS1013D Plus)

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Availability: Only 2 left in stock, order soon!
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Arrives Tuesday, May 7
Order within 14 hours and 32 minutes
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Features

  • Professional Designed : 2 channels, 100 MHz analog bandwidth @ 1 GSa/s Real-time sampling, 240kbit Sample memory depth.
  • HD Screen : 7'' color TFT- LCD touch screen with 800 * 480 resolution.
  • Easily Measuring :Auto/Normal/Single 3 Trigger modes,it is easy to capture instantaneous waveform.
  • Intelligent Anti-burn : Built-in high-voltage protection module,can tolerate a continuous voltage of up to 400V.
  • Versatile : ASD1013D is widely applicable in the academic experiment, electronic product design,debugging and maintenance, electronic engineering education, etc.

Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 7.09 x 1.57 x 4.72 inches; 1.76 Pounds


Batteries ‏ : ‎ 1 Lithium Polymer batteries required. (included)


Date First Available ‏ : ‎ May 20, 2020


Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ yeapook


Country of Origin ‏ : ‎ China


Best Sellers Rank: #86,492 in Industrial & Scientific (See Top 100 in Industrial & Scientific) #68 in Lab Oscilloscopes


#68 in Lab Oscilloscopes:


Customer Reviews: 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 639 ratings


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Tuesday, May 7

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Wonderful scope!
Style: ADS1013D Plus
I would have never thought I could get a 2 channel scope for this cheap and actually have it work. This thing is amazing and setup takes like a minute tops. If you just need basic checking without setting up a full on scope like a Pico then this thing is what you want. I regularly use it for bus communication lines and sensor signal checking. Highly recommend. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 8, 2023 by Dan K

  • Ok. Good for simpler stuff
Style: ADS1013D Plus
Seems like the speed at which it can trigger on an intermittent signal is slow. It doesn't always find the signal and trigger the waveform. Just shows a flat line with the occasional blip of a signal. Auto mode is a hit and miss. Often selects the wrong voltage. Easy enough to adjust. Trigger on signal doesn't always work. Sometimes blank screen and other times it shows the waveform. When capturing a waveform, if you are "zoom" in on the wave it can look quite a bit different then "zoomed" out. Almost like the capture points are increased as you zoom in. This makes it difficult as if you have the intermittent signal like mentioned above, you adjust the divisions so as to see a longer period. You save a waveform and then zoom in to examine it. Then you adjust the divisions so a to see a close up view of the wave. Capture it and compare it to your other one. The two will look very different. Even the voltage will be off ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 26, 2023 by Jason H.

  • Easy to use. Remembers last settings. Not ideal for a TDR.
Style: ADS1013D Plus
The screen is nice and bright. Touch screen menus mostly work well. Short learning curve due to simplistic design, which I like. It remembers the last settings, which is great for a dedicated use. User interface: Channel 2 pull-down menu doesn't work right. Touches are mostly ignored, and X10 probe cannot be selected, only X1 and X100. I can't believe nobody else has this problem. It isn't the touch screen, because channel 1 works fine. I see no way to update the firmware to fix this problem. Not an issue for my application, but a pretty basic flaw since it came with two X1-X10 probes. Not a real 1 GS/s scope. Repeated triggers on a short pulse show walking ringing phase consistent with this being a sampling scope, not a real-time scope. I got this to use with the TDR project in the May 2021 QST. Even with the sampling issue, opens and shorts can be located. The ringing is less significant at higher channel 1 sensitivity setting. The ringing seems to occur after the input voltage divider, while observing channel 1 and triggering on channel 2. The TDR waveform at channel 1 is not so good for triggering because the main pulse appears at different amplitudes in each sweep, allowing mis-triggers on large echos. I read one review online that called this scope a data logger with an oscilloscope-type display. That is not a bad analogy. For repetitive waveforms, such as a TDR, an averaging function would greatly improve the displayed results. The attached photo doesn't capture the full extent of the variable ringing. The photo shows a TDR pulse propagating down 60 feet of coax to an antenna with a DC short at its input. The 50 ns per division scale displays very close to 10 feet per division (one way distance). Jittery but still useful. I am going to use this TDR to find shorts in my yard lights, which happen from time to time. Less digging... The pulse width capacitor in the May 2021 QST TDR article is obviously in the wrong place. It should be on U1-10, NOT on U1-11 where it delays both inputs to U2 pulse generator. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 9, 2021 by William E Coleman William E Coleman

  • I'm old school, needed a new 'scope. Found out they don't make analog scopes any more ......
Style: ADS1013D Plus
I constantly harass the guys at work who use digital scopes, all the times they can't figure out what they're looking at. And I have to tell them what they see is just the digital scope trying to fake a signal from data. Bad triggering, quantization error, aliasing, holding a signal instead of displaying current data that it couldn't trigger on, there's no end to it. Throw it on my analog scope, the signal literally writes itself on the front of the CRT. What's more, I'm one of those fogeys who grew up on vacuum tubes and dial phones and the software that runs digital stuff like smartphones just bewilders and frustrates me. Which is kinda funny, because I understand the guts of computers and write PIC assembly code that's not only bug-free, it's so well documented that other engineers can work with it and even convert the whole product to C code. But now I'm setting up a new workbench at home, out of my own pocket. And find out I can't buy an analog scope. They don't make 'em any more. Dreaded fighting with a digital 'scope. And on a budget, it was gonna have to be something with a touchscreen. Designed for people who grew up with cellphones and it's their "normal". Well, at least this one got fairly good reviews, and looked like it delivered good value in its price range. Would i ever actually get it to display a waveform? i figured the thing out pretty quick without help from anyone. The user interface is incredibly well thought out. A masterpiece of elegant simplicity. Where's all the fiddles for getting it to trigger on the signal? Oh, It finds the signal and triggers on it automatically. As well as I'd be able to if I had to fight with it manually. Works beautifully. Complaints? Signals look noisy because of quantization errors (in fact, it's a good tool for explaining quantization noise to someone who doesn't understand the concept). But the manufacturer even has a "fix" for that: press the "button" and it holds the signal. Now it looks clean, it's not shimmering. ...... And, the scope probes are cheap. But good probes cost money, shouldn't expect good quality probes on an instrument in this price range. They work, they're usable. Good enough. Never thought I could love a digital "gadget". But I really love this little 'scope. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2021 by Dave J.

  • Pretty impressive, but not enough sensitivity for my needs.
Style: ADS1013D Plus
I was impressed with this device. When I last used a 'scope, it was decades ago with a Tektronics the size of a toaster oven. This little thing does a lot, but I need more sensitivity to see the output of guitar pickups. There are more sensitive models from this manufacturer. I will probably buy the more sensitive model when the need arrises. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 27, 2023 by EH Hackney

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