Already have a 100MHz scope, but just purchased one of these little beasts. Got it for the times I just need a quick check and can't be buggered getting the desktop scope out, (very limited work space.) Could also be handy for checking items at my vintage radio club's auctions.
Great video. I bought one of these for the price and convenience. Up until I watched this video, I didn't know how to use it. I learned so much from this. Thank you!
I had so much fun with Tektronix oscilloscopes in college forty years ago. Funny I can't recall exactly what I did - aging brain - just that it was fun.
I have a Zeeweii DSO2512G (similar concept to your Fnisri). These things are amazingly good (within their limitations) and definitely good enough for the occasional hobbyist. To me, main +ve is portability and main -ve is menus and scrolling (nothing like a unique button per function and knobs for adjustments).
My very first 'scope was all tubes, a 'dy' brand, (which was an 'hp' logo turned upside down. It was an HP from some military contract that got cancelled, and I used it as the heater to warm my electronics lab in my shed even after I got a better scope. It was about an 800 Watt heater and it had a 10 inch cooling fan.) I have about 8 'scopes now, from $20 audio frequency 'scopes on PCB's, sans cases, to $90 Fnirsi's, to Fluke handheld's, to my high-end bench gear. They all serve their purpose. But I do wish I could send a Fnirsi 'scope, a Fluke multimeter, a TinySA, a component tester, and a NanoVNA back in time to me when I was a kid. All these tiny, battery-powered, dirt cheap, full featured tech tools today are simply amazing.
I've been tinkering with electronics for over 40 years and not one single electronics lesson in school or college. I only learned as much "theory" as I felt I needed because getting hands on and doing is the best way to learn by far. It did help that my dad (who was a sparky by trade) taught me how to solder when I was a boy.
At school we had a class set of Telequipment Serviscope Minor 'scopes, and a Cossor 1049 valve 'scope on a trolley - for use by teacher and U6. My first 'scope was a Hameg 203-4 (bought in 1982 I still have it - used for vintage TV repair), although I now have a couple of Rigols. I also have a couple of Serviscope Minors, and a Cossor 1039M. The digital scopes are great for most work, but I find the Hameg more intuitive to use.
Just picked up an OWON HDS272S, it is 3 times the money, but still cheap. Dual trace 70 MHz with a DVM and AWG. It is almost as good as my bench scope, but portable, and I'm not afraid of setting on a car fender to checkout the fuel injection.
Some of the props in Thunderbirds are actually normal size not tiny but they are using a more compact Oscilloscope in that footage..and the consumer size reel to reels .. fun stuff ! . The puppets were 1/3 size of humans notice how they don't show them standing next to the gear - their mouth parts opened by solenoids being fed with the audio dialogue !
Very professional presentation, thank you. However, please include and use adapters so that the internal function gen can be used at the same time as the oscilloscope function.
Interesting review - thanks. I might get one of these as a backup "away from the bench" scope, it seems like it'd be pretty handy. (waves from South Oxon!)
Great review and a refreshing take on it ! and yeah I have my Tek scope and my siglent and a couple of fun handhelds one of which was 15 quid and you built it yourself and they all have there uses. Just for fun I have recently built a 1Khz sinewave source stabilized by a light bulb (thanks to Mr Wien and Mr Hewlett) very posh sinewave indeed Phil would like it and I can make it very pricey too !....cheers.
I'll keep my dual channel HP 100MHZ. - i don't have to put my glasses on to use it - but I'm sure this product is useful in many situations and the component tester looks nice if it's accurate .
For the last half year I'm using a very nice combo DMM-Oscilloscope, the Zoyi ZT-702S. It's about the same price. The DMM is very accurate and the single channel oscilloscope has a very easy to use interface, Serves the same purpose as the FNIRSI and worthwhile giving a look. My first scope was the Hameg 203 you showed and if I had the space for it I would hunt for one. Loved it.
I had that Hameg 203 scope too. Bought it for about NLG 1000, back in those good old pre-Euro days. That was expensive for me, back then. I have both this Fnirsi and the Zoyi scopes too. And another 2 channel digital Chinese 100 MHz scope. I prefer the more direct response of the old analog scopes, but other than that, digital ones rule.
Hi, I’ve always been tempted to get an oscilloscope but thought they were expensive… until now! Can you use it for FFT analysis so you can see what distortion an amp is generating? Thanks
I did a couple of years of a City & Guilds Telecoms Technician's course back in the mid '70s and the nigh-class lecturer (from whom I learned the most) frequently "illustrated" explanations by talking about applying voltages to a certain part of the male anatomy. I notice that this gizmo's connectors do not seem to be up to the task.
Read the listings carefully and make sure you get the one with all the probes. The slightly cheaper ones lave out a probe. $53USD on eBay here in the US, shipped from the US.
In my opinion, miniaturization is taken too far here, making settings too cumbersome and viewing inadequate. I saw that the company makes products at around double the cost that answer many of my objections. After decades of Tektronix 475, I would welcome the massive improvement of modern display tech enough to say bye to my old Tek. But this $60 unit would not be enough. I have to thank you for this as I was not aware of the low cost and huge selection of such scopes until I took a look after your video. Great review.
It s possible to see the vaweform of a car diesel injector I am paying for Haynes autodata where I have all the correct vaweform .can bus etc...without damaging this little tool????
I used to fast forward through unboxings until I tried doing one myself and now I find it fun. As for yours, your UA-cam retention statistics should tell you whether what you do suits your audience.
Add 20% VAT and you would expect approximate parity of USD and GBP. Unless you live in Alaska (and few other states) you won't be paying $65 after sales tax.
@AudioMasterclass Ohh 2014 😆. Probably there are modern alternatives. Yeah, it's old and free. E-MU on cex is 20-25 pounds, distortion step in enclosed in itself loop is about 140dB. For such money, there are no alternatives. RMAA + E-MU pair may be used to measure any dac, amp or speaker. Many radio and audio enthusiasts are still using this because it is more than enough.
Thanks because I'm 1 of the Audiophiles U goad swearing we can't we can't hear the Music @ the level a sound Engineer does, Lucky those typically go to at least 100khz even though the state 20Mhz. I 40 years into Electronics
Even at (sic) 20MHz, you may start to see a drop in amplitude, point being 100kHz of BW may not be sufficient for any engineer worth of his/her salt but perhaps good enough for an audiophile. My 2p.
@@fernandofonseca3354 In some cases not good enough because SMPS can have higher main frequency+ harmonics but the tool at the price can still be useful
@@thinkIndependent2024 But of course! 😊 No engineer in his/her right mind would use a Fnirsi scope to do serious work on a SMPS! I certainly know this for a fact as I design SMPSs for a living. That said, I agree that for the average tinkerer/hobbyist, the Fnirsi perfectly adequate.😊 I wish I had one back in my younger days...😅 PS: An SMPS in an audiophile rig??? Perish the thought! 😅
@@fernandofonseca3354I don't disagree I was just saying @ $60 it offers some level of usefulness owning over 30k in test equipment pulling out a cheaper piece of diagnostic is better than more expensive out of the protective case which cost 5 times more for just the case alone( sometimes just good enough for a go no go test)
Tbh the trigger on these affordable scopes from China seem to be too sensitive either to noise (poor PCB routing?) or because uber cheap 8-bit ADCs are used rather than the customary 12 bits (my PRC made Hantek won't even trigger on mV signals but hey 300€ for a 150MHz scope, who's complaining?... ). Do the same experiment on a well maintained 15-year-old Tek TDS3000 series (digital and still pricey even used) and your signal will look absolutely spot on, just as seen on your trusty Hameg. So yes it is always a good idea to... test the tester! Another thing I tell my "children" at work (yes I'm an old fart too) is to use cursors to make measurements whenever possible... and have fun!!!😊
Imagine going to school and not being able to touch the oscilloscope !! Terrible .. I learned more in the first 10 minutes of owning mine by USING IT.. than reading through materials and watching hours of videos. The calibration is the part you just have to pay close attention to.
To be clear, we did have oscilloscopes that we could use. I just don't remember anyone other than the teacher using the big scope. I think we were lucky enough to have a scope for each bench.
Your a teacher , or high up in education or somewhere high . l would have been kicked out of your classroom if I were lucky enough . So Sir , you mentioned a load, i guess a speaker would suffice but could you use a coil say from a transformer? Does it measure impedance ? Would a 2 channel, SCO2 Dual Channel Digital AUTO Oscilloscope PWM 50M 10Mhz Sampling Rate 2.5KSa/S Analog Bandwidth for Electronic Repair Tools, similar dollars, be more suitable for audio ? Bad students are us pty ltd. Thanks .
The simplest dummy load is just a resistor of a suitable value and power capability. This would not replicate a real loudspeaker but it's close enough for many purposes. I suspect there are many people with much greater knowledge and ability than mine who know about designing dummy loads so my video on this topic would be something perhaps for the future. As for the SCO oscilloscope, I haven't tested it so it would be better for me not to comment.
@@AudioMasterclass Thank you s much for that . As for a duel input oscilloscope i was thinking crossover signal cut off points with 2 speaker signals superimposed. But of course now i feel silly designing a 3 way . Thanks again .
Already have a 100MHz scope, but just purchased one of these little beasts. Got it for the times I just need a quick check and can't be buggered getting the desktop scope out, (very limited work space.) Could also be handy for checking items at my vintage radio club's auctions.
Great video. I bought one of these for the price and convenience. Up until I watched this video, I didn't know how to use it. I learned so much from this. Thank you!
I purchased the exact model a few months ago to test my studio gear for issues, and it's the best $85AU I spent.
The depth of knowledge this guy has is amazing and it shows through on his other videos.
You're embarrassing me now but I'll heart your comment nonetheless.
I had so much fun with Tektronix oscilloscopes in college forty years ago. Funny I can't recall exactly what I did - aging brain - just that it was fun.
I have a Zeeweii DSO2512G (similar concept to your Fnisri). These things are amazingly good (within their limitations) and definitely good enough for the occasional hobbyist. To me, main +ve is portability and main -ve is menus and scrolling (nothing like a unique button per function and knobs for adjustments).
My very first 'scope was all tubes, a 'dy' brand, (which was an 'hp' logo turned upside down. It was an HP from some military contract that got cancelled, and I used it as the heater to warm my electronics lab in my shed even after I got a better scope. It was about an 800 Watt heater and it had a 10 inch cooling fan.) I have about 8 'scopes now, from $20 audio frequency 'scopes on PCB's, sans cases, to $90 Fnirsi's, to Fluke handheld's, to my high-end bench gear. They all serve their purpose. But I do wish I could send a Fnirsi 'scope, a Fluke multimeter, a TinySA, a component tester, and a NanoVNA back in time to me when I was a kid. All these tiny, battery-powered, dirt cheap, full featured tech tools today are simply amazing.
I've been tinkering with electronics for over 40 years and not one single electronics lesson in school or college. I only learned as much "theory" as I felt I needed because getting hands on and doing is the best way to learn by far. It did help that my dad (who was a sparky by trade) taught me how to solder when I was a boy.
At school we had a class set of Telequipment Serviscope Minor 'scopes, and a Cossor 1049 valve 'scope on a trolley - for use by teacher and U6.
My first 'scope was a Hameg 203-4 (bought in 1982 I still have it - used for vintage TV repair), although I now have a couple of Rigols. I also have a couple of Serviscope Minors, and a Cossor 1039M.
The digital scopes are great for most work, but I find the Hameg more intuitive to use.
Wow you’re an oscilloscopophile!
Just picked up an OWON HDS272S, it is 3 times the money, but still cheap. Dual trace 70 MHz with a DVM and AWG. It is almost as good as my bench scope, but portable, and I'm not afraid of setting on a car fender to checkout the fuel injection.
Living your best life.
What's the latest FW for this thing. I hope they can keep a repository online for updates.
Some of the props in Thunderbirds are actually normal size not tiny but they are using a more compact Oscilloscope in that footage..and the consumer size reel to reels .. fun stuff ! . The puppets were 1/3 size of humans notice how they don't show them standing next to the gear - their mouth parts opened by solenoids being fed with the audio dialogue !
I've recently rewatched all of the episodes. What they did with dust and dirt, and explosions of course, was phenomenal.
Very professional presentation, thank you. However, please include and use adapters so that the internal function gen can be used at the same time as the oscilloscope function.
Interesting review - thanks. I might get one of these as a backup "away from the bench" scope, it seems like it'd be pretty handy. (waves from South Oxon!)
As they say, any scope is better than no scope. These are fine and dandy for casual use in audio.
Great video ! Very educative. Thank you.
Excellent video, David! And you were clearly having fun! Well done!!!
Great review and a refreshing take on it ! and yeah I have my Tek scope and my siglent and a couple of fun handhelds one of which was 15 quid and you built it yourself and they all have there uses. Just for fun I have recently built a 1Khz sinewave source stabilized by a light bulb (thanks to Mr Wien and Mr Hewlett) very posh sinewave indeed Phil would like it and I can make it very pricey too !....cheers.
i just luv the music composition, it's great
I’d agree with Mr audio master class it does look fun for £65 and the data readout genuinely useful
It would be lovely to find one of these that ran open source code. I would love to add dB readings, etc.
more important to sort out the bugs first 😂
I'll keep my dual channel HP 100MHZ. - i don't have to put my glasses on to use it - but I'm sure this product is useful in many situations and the component tester looks nice if it's accurate .
The component tester is nice. If I'd had something like this during my electronics era I'd have used it lots.
Thank you for your review. I ordered one professional version for 55usd. what is the difference b/w standard and professional version?
Fnirsi will be best placed to answer this.
Did you forget that Amazon UK prices contain UK VAT taxes of 20% ? The U.S. does not have VAT but most states do have 5-9% sales tax.
is it analogue and does it involve tedious inconveniences?
Can it also replace my childhood hot water bottle?
For the last half year I'm using a very nice combo DMM-Oscilloscope, the Zoyi ZT-702S. It's about the same price. The DMM is very accurate and the single channel oscilloscope has a very easy to use interface, Serves the same purpose as the FNIRSI and worthwhile giving a look.
My first scope was the Hameg 203 you showed and if I had the space for it I would hunt for one. Loved it.
I like my Hameg and it will take something special to replace it.
I had that Hameg 203 scope too. Bought it for about NLG 1000, back in those good old pre-Euro days. That was expensive for me, back then.
I have both this Fnirsi and the Zoyi scopes too. And another 2 channel digital Chinese 100 MHz scope.
I prefer the more direct response of the old analog scopes, but other than that, digital ones rule.
@@AudioMasterclass I wouldn't replace it with anything if I were you ;-)
Now you just need to add some fft function.
@4:30 did Clarke mention the magic smoke as well ? 😅
As far as I know, the Fnirsi doesn't have a magic smoke detector. But it will confirm whether any component has lost theirs.
Hi, I’ve always been tempted to get an oscilloscope but thought they were expensive… until now! Can you use it for FFT analysis so you can see what distortion an amp is generating? Thanks
Unless there is a hidden function not detailed in the manual then no. I use a plugin spectrograph that tells me enough for my needs.
if that jitter is internal, I bet my bottom euro any fft will be all over the place like looking at a spread spectrum signal... my 2p
I did a couple of years of a City & Guilds Telecoms Technician's course back in the mid '70s and the nigh-class lecturer (from whom I learned the most) frequently "illustrated" explanations by talking about applying voltages to a certain part of the male anatomy. I notice that this gizmo's connectors do not seem to be up to the task.
Sounds like you've got the 10X switch on the probe on 🙂
DeVry students will be snapping these up like candy.
Dollar prices don't include TAX UK prices do.
Nice video! Thanks you
are those bats in the uk?, they funny and you have a way of getting to the subject in a jovial way, thnx>
Do these come with probes or need to purchase them separately?
My kit has a probe.
Read the listings carefully and make sure you get the one with all the probes. The slightly cheaper ones lave out a probe. $53USD on eBay here in the US, shipped from the US.
Out look at Amir. Here comes Audio Masterclass.
Very amusing but not likely to happen.
In my opinion, miniaturization is taken too far here, making settings too cumbersome and viewing inadequate. I saw that the company makes products at around double the cost that answer many of my objections. After decades of Tektronix 475, I would welcome the massive improvement of modern display tech enough to say bye to my old Tek. But this $60 unit would not be enough. I have to thank you for this as I was not aware of the low cost and huge selection of such scopes until I took a look after your video. Great review.
Have a look at the Zeeweii DSO3D12. It might just fit the bill.
Cool stuff
It s possible to see the vaweform of a car diesel injector I am paying for Haynes autodata where I have all the correct vaweform .can bus etc...without damaging this little tool????
My guess, and it is a guess, is that if you can do this with a normal oscilloscope you can do it with the Fnirsi. Free advice comes with no guarantee,
thx for your advice ...have a nice day
Hello!
Does it display THD?
Thanks!
No.
All this time I’ve been doing it wrong, rushing my un-boxings and doing so in silence. 😂
I used to fast forward through unboxings until I tried doing one myself and now I find it fun. As for yours, your UA-cam retention statistics should tell you whether what you do suits your audience.
Add 20% VAT and you would expect approximate parity of USD and GBP. Unless you live in Alaska (and few other states) you won't be paying $65 after sales tax.
Under $50 delivered to US when on sale, direct from Ali Baba & The 40 Thieves.
I had to get to 4:49, before he actually explained what this thing is
Isn't it easier to use rmaa ?
It may well be but seeing as they haven't updated their website since 2014 I might give it a miss.
@AudioMasterclass Ohh
2014 😆. Probably there are modern alternatives.
Yeah, it's old and free.
E-MU on cex is 20-25 pounds, distortion step in enclosed in itself loop is about 140dB. For such money, there are no alternatives. RMAA + E-MU pair may be used to measure any dac, amp or speaker. Many radio and audio enthusiasts are still using this because it is more than enough.
Thanks because I'm 1 of the Audiophiles U goad swearing we can't we can't hear the Music @ the level a sound Engineer does, Lucky those typically go to at least 100khz even though the state 20Mhz. I 40 years into Electronics
Even at (sic) 20MHz, you may start to see a drop in amplitude, point being 100kHz of BW may not be sufficient for any engineer worth of his/her salt but perhaps good enough for an audiophile. My 2p.
@@fernandofonseca3354 In some cases not good enough because SMPS can have higher main frequency+ harmonics but the tool at the price can still be useful
@@thinkIndependent2024 But of course! 😊 No engineer in his/her right mind would use a Fnirsi scope to do serious work on a SMPS! I certainly know this for a fact as I design SMPSs for a living. That said, I agree that for the average tinkerer/hobbyist, the Fnirsi perfectly adequate.😊 I wish I had one back in my younger days...😅
PS: An SMPS in an audiophile rig??? Perish the thought! 😅
@@fernandofonseca3354I don't disagree I was just saying @ $60 it offers some level of usefulness owning over 30k in test equipment pulling out a cheaper piece of diagnostic is better than more expensive out of the protective case which cost 5 times more for just the case alone( sometimes just good enough for a go no go test)
Tbh the trigger on these affordable scopes from China seem to be too sensitive either to noise (poor PCB routing?) or because uber cheap 8-bit ADCs are used rather than the customary 12 bits (my PRC made Hantek won't even trigger on mV signals but hey 300€ for a 150MHz scope, who's complaining?... ). Do the same experiment on a well maintained 15-year-old Tek TDS3000 series (digital and still pricey even used) and your signal will look absolutely spot on, just as seen on your trusty Hameg. So yes it is always a good idea to... test the tester! Another thing I tell my "children" at work (yes I'm an old fart too) is to use cursors to make measurements whenever possible... and have fun!!!😊
Imagine going to school and not being able to touch the oscilloscope !! Terrible .. I learned more in the first 10 minutes of owning mine by USING IT.. than reading through materials and watching hours of videos. The calibration is the part you just have to pay close attention to.
To be clear, we did have oscilloscopes that we could use. I just don't remember anyone other than the teacher using the big scope. I think we were lucky enough to have a scope for each bench.
BNC = British Naval Connector 🙂
Your a teacher , or high up in education or somewhere high . l would have been kicked out of your classroom if I were lucky enough . So Sir , you mentioned a load, i guess a speaker would suffice but could you use a coil say from a transformer? Does it measure impedance ? Would a 2 channel, SCO2 Dual Channel Digital AUTO Oscilloscope PWM 50M 10Mhz Sampling Rate 2.5KSa/S Analog Bandwidth for Electronic Repair Tools, similar dollars, be more suitable for audio ? Bad students are us pty ltd. Thanks .
The simplest dummy load is just a resistor of a suitable value and power capability. This would not replicate a real loudspeaker but it's close enough for many purposes. I suspect there are many people with much greater knowledge and ability than mine who know about designing dummy loads so my video on this topic would be something perhaps for the future. As for the SCO oscilloscope, I haven't tested it so it would be better for me not to comment.
@@AudioMasterclass Thank you s much for that . As for a duel input oscilloscope i was thinking crossover signal cut off points with 2 speaker signals superimposed. But of course now i feel silly designing a 3 way . Thanks again .
Holden Garden
65 Eurodollarpounds
I wonder how to test dirty electricity with an oscilloscope? 🙄
When it comes to mains electricity we are amateurs. Avoid. P.S. 240 volts in the UK.
@@AudioMasterclass I was thinking of the 12v output of some PSU.
damn, can’t call them CROs
We miss those cathode rays.
Conn Fords
These things are only good for audio anyway, they top out at 500KHz
Schaden Park
Von Place
*Fast forward to **6:43** if you don't want to hear all of the RAMBLING BLA BLA BLA*