I also have a bitscope (www.bitscope.com) and find it works well. It can be built from your own parts or you can buy it as a kit form or fully assembled. Schematics are available at the site. The nice thing about it (besides being PIC driven) is that it is both logic (8 channels) and analog (2 channels), something most scopes cant handle. Analog and digital are sampled simultaneously at 25 MHz max. With subsampling you can go up to around 100 MHz. A faster ADC is also now available at 40 MHz. Software is getting better for it. I am doing some work on this. Down loads and screen shots can be found at http://www.cyberus.ca/~g_will There is also a group for bitscope at eGroups. Regards, Gordon Williams ----- Original Message ----- From: "Andy Howard" Sent: Sunday, September 10, 2000 2:18 PM Subject: Re: [OT]: Oscilloscope for PC? > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Ole Petter Rxnningen" > To: > Sent: Sunday, September 10, 2000 4:35 PM > Subject: [OT]: Oscilloscope for PC? > > > > Hi > > > > I am considering buing/building an oscilloscope for use with general > > electronics and PIC development, strictly on a hobby basis. I suppose the > > cheaoes alternative would be a PC 'based' oscilloscope. Anyone have > > recommendations? > > > You might like to look at http://www.bitscope.com/ and > http://sourceforge.net/projects/xoscope/, > -- http://www.piclist.com hint: The PICList is archived three different ways. See http://www.piclist.com/#archives for details.