---
product_id: 168239702
title: "RIGOL Digital Oscilloscope DS1202Z-E 200 MHz 2-Ch 1 GSa/s 24 Mpts 30,000 wfms/s UltraVision 7\" 800x480 Intensity Display, 60,000-Frame Record, Serial Decode UART I2C SPI for Debug & Education"
brand: "rigol"
price: "¥116081"
currency: JPY
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 10
category: "Rigol"
url: https://www.desertcart.jp/products/168239702-rigol-digital-oscilloscope-ds1202z-e-200-mhz-2-ch-1
store_origin: JP
region: Japan
---

# 1 GSa/s real-time sampling 24 Mpts deep memory 200 MHz bandwidth RIGOL Digital Oscilloscope DS1202Z-E 200 MHz 2-Ch 1 GSa/s 24 Mpts 30,000 wfms/s UltraVision 7" 800x480 Intensity Display, 60,000-Frame Record, Serial Decode UART I2C SPI for Debug & Education

**Brand:** rigol
**Price:** ¥116081
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> ⚡ Unlock pro-level insights with Rigol’s powerhouse oscilloscope — don’t get left in the signal noise!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** RIGOL Digital Oscilloscope DS1202Z-E 200 MHz 2-Ch 1 GSa/s 24 Mpts 30,000 wfms/s UltraVision 7" 800x480 Intensity Display, 60,000-Frame Record, Serial Decode UART I2C SPI for Debug & Education by rigol
- **How much does it cost?** ¥116081 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.jp](https://www.desertcart.jp/products/168239702-rigol-digital-oscilloscope-ds1202z-e-200-mhz-2-ch-1)

## Best For

- rigol enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted rigol brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Seamless Debugging:** Built-in serial decode for UART, I2C, and SPI protocols accelerates embedded system troubleshooting.
- • **Capture Every Detail:** UltraVision tech with 30,000 waveforms per second and 24 Mpts memory ensures no glitch or anomaly slips through.
- • **Precision Meets Power:** 200 MHz bandwidth and 2 analog channels deliver crystal-clear signal analysis for professional-grade diagnostics.
- • **Connectivity & Control:** USB Host, Device, and LAN interfaces plus 60,000-frame record/playback empower remote monitoring and workflow integration.
- • **Visual Clarity On Point:** 7-inch 800x480 intensity-graded color display offers vibrant, jitter-revealing waveform visualization.

## Overview

The RIGOL DS1202Z-E is a 200 MHz digital oscilloscope featuring 2 analog channels, 1 GSa/s real-time sampling rate, and a deep 24 Mpts memory. Its UltraVision display captures up to 30,000 waveforms per second on a bright 7-inch 800x480 color screen, perfect for revealing subtle signal details. With advanced serial decoding (UART, I2C, SPI), extensive connectivity options (USB, LAN), and 60,000-frame record/playback, it’s engineered for professional debugging, embedded development, and educational labs — all at an exceptional value that redefines what a modern oscilloscope can do.

## Description

RIGOL Digital Oscilloscope DS1202Z-E 200 MHz 2-Ch 1 GSa/s 24 Mpts 30,000 wfms/s UltraVision 7" 800x480 Intensity Display, 60,000-Frame Record/Playback, Serial Decode UART I2C SPI for Debug & Education: desertcart.com: Industrial & Scientific

Review: Amazing value for a fabulous scope - In a world I used to know many years ago, this scope would have cost thousands of dollars. So here it is now, a scope that can practically do anything for a fraction of the olden days cost and I am not exaggerating. 200 MHz bandwidth is pretty astounding at this price. It has measurements, deep storage, big screen, print screen, and a depth of functions so deep that they defy my ability or patience to list them all. Go to Rigol's site and read the manual and data sheet for this little beast. It is astounding. Ok, enough hyperbole, here's what you may actually want to know. In short, nothing about this scope feels cheap. The scope feels like it has a quality build. No unusually wiggly knobs, for example. It has a reasonable weight. Scopes used to weigh 30 pounds or more and we had to roll them around on carts. This thing is no heavier than a lunchbox with a thermos inside. The handle supports the thing quite well. The plastic body is nicely molded to the contours of the inner chassis so it does not take up any more space than it needs to. The knobs and buttons are excellent for their smoothness and placement. Coming from analog scopes, it takes some time to become used to the lack of horizontal timebase markings and separate controls for each channel. It does not take long to become accustomed to this scope, though. Some of the legends on the screen are very tiny but luckily you can enlarge the font on many of them. Some folks like to gripe about fan noise in equipment and I agree that some are pretty loud. This fan is very docile and it does not annoy me at all. Even so, my hand cannot detect even the slightest warmth in the case after an hour's operation. The display is plenty bright. The display is big (wide) but the sides are permanently occupied by the legends for the soft keys. You can't turn them off as you can on some scopes. No big loss, in my opinion. The scope has built-in help for just about every function. It really is well written and actually, well, helpful. No printed manual comes with the scope. You have to download it. The scope has a speaker to announce button presses but it is inaudible to my old ears. The included probes are nice and not at all the junky things I was expecting. In operation, it took me a while to get used to dialing in for a stable signal. Not the scope's fault. After an hour or two I got adept at capturing the signal I wanted. In fact, if you get hopelessly lost, you can just press the Auto button and you've got about a 90% chance of locking on to your waveform. With practice, you don't need Auto any longer but it's nice to have it available. The scope as it is being sold now has all the options running with no time limit so you don't have to spend hundreds of dollars more optioning up the scope. My favorite thing about this scope, beside the beauty of its operation, is its ability to display dozens of measurement about the signal. I don't have to count squares and do math in my head to figure out the p-p or the rms. It even displays the frequency of the signal. If I have any complaint, it is that some of the functions are way down in the menus. However, once you learn where they are, the problem is over for you. You will spend some time learning to use this scope but the results will be worth it. What I don't like: Just small things. The multifunction knob is too sensitive. It is frustrating as it often overshoots the selection. While pressing the knob to finalize your selection it often jumps to an adjacent selection. This needs to be fixed in firmware. Also, it bothers me that unused positions behind the front panel illuminate during startup for buttons that are not even installed on this scope. The power cord is really thick. You would think this scope has the amp draw of an arc welder. The thick cord is a bit difficult to handle. As I said, small stuff all. This is a terrific scope. I recommend it and don't see how you could do better at this price.
Review: Much better than expected - For $300? That's ridiculous. This is comparable to one of those Tek lunchboxes. It's substantial, had more heft to it than I expected. Industrial design is pretty nice. The fan was audible even at first turn on. Almost like something was rubbing, but not that bad. Shake it and it goes away and then comes back when you shift the position around. I'm not concerned. The probes are pretty nice. Shrouded BNCs, nice pointy tips, decent lead length. These also feel substantial and good quality. The screen is spacious. I was kind of shocked when I took it out of the box. Some things are pretty small, like the vertical scale, but still legible. What's important is the capture is huge and bright. Brightness is set to 60% by default and that seems maybe a little too much. There's menus on either side of the trace, they never go away, but it doesn't feel cramped at all. I see in here where people had trouble with operation. Did not have that problem in the slightest. The knobs are not marked very well but duh. I had it mastered in ten minutes. There's some stuff that is less than intuitive, for instance changing variables in the menus when there's more than one. The UI logic seems pretty sound. Previous menu is always selected next, vertical control closes open menus (with selected variables), single automatically lights stop, stuff like that. Storage is easy, so many maths, saves to png, types A and B and an RJ45. There's all kinds of stuff I'm never going to use. I'm never connecting this to a network. It's in my garage. So I will likely never press the print button. Will I ever use a delayed trigger? Not likely either, I'm troubleshooting audio equipment. I didn't rate the accuracy because I lack a standard. I guess I could compare it to my old Fluke 87 III that hasn't been calibrated in two decades. Or maybe not. I just want to get to probing things. Is that so wrong?

## Features

- 【Core Specs】200 MHz digital oscilloscope with 2 analog channels and external trigger input, up to 1 GSa/s real-time sample rate and standard deep memory up to 24 Mpts (12 Mpts dual-channel) for longer captures at higher sample rate.
- 【Waveform Capture & Display】Up to 30,000 wfms/s waveform capture rate helps reveal intermittent glitches; 7" WVGA (800×480) TFT with intensity graded color display provides a digital-phosphor style view for jitter and noise visibility.
- 【Record/Playback & Decode】Hardware real-time waveform recording and playback up to 60,000 frames supports event review. Serial bus trigger and decoding functions support RS232/UART, I2C and SPI for embedded troubleshooting.
- 【Connectivity & Remote】Standard interfaces include USB Host, USB Device and LAN (LXI), plus AUX output (TrigOut/PassFail) for bench integration and documentation workflows.
- 【Applications】Digital oscilloscope for electronics debugging, education labs, power and embedded bring-up; deep memory and capture rate help you keep both the big picture and fine details in long time captures.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN | B07XSH2NR2 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #114,556 in Industrial & Scientific ( See Top 100 in Industrial & Scientific ) #55 in Lab Oscilloscopes |
| Brand | Rigol |
| Color | White, blue |
| Date First Available | October 15, 2019 |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00764560091433 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 6.36 pounds |
| Item dimensions L x W x H | 12.33 x 6.33 x 4.82 inches |
| Item model number | DS1202Z-E |
| Manufacturer | RIGOL TECHNOLOGIES USA INC |
| Measurement Type | Multimeter |
| Min. Operating Voltage | 100 Volts |
| Power Source | Corded Electric |
| Product Dimensions | 12.33 x 6.33 x 4.82 inches |
| Style | Foldable UV/White Beam |
| UPC | 764560091433 |
| Upper Temperature Rating | 122 Degrees Fahrenheit |

## Product Details

- **Brand:** Rigol
- **Color:** White, blue
- **Item Weight:** 2.89 Kilograms
- **Power Source:** Corded Electric
- **Style:** Foldable UV/White Beam

## Images

![RIGOL Digital Oscilloscope DS1202Z-E 200 MHz 2-Ch 1 GSa/s 24 Mpts 30,000 wfms/s UltraVision 7" 800x480 Intensity Display, 60,000-Frame Record, Serial Decode UART I2C SPI for Debug & Education - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71sE1Y-c7dL.jpg)

## Available Options

This product comes in different **Model** options.

## Questions & Answers

**Q: Can it connect to a big screen via usb or hdmi?**
A: This model cannot connect to an external display. The free PC software will let you visualize all the data from the screen on your PC which can be put up on a big screen, but the not directly from the display.

**Q: Does it come with scope probes and the software packages listed on amazon? (at-ds1000z - advanced triggering option mem-ds1000z - etc**
A: Mine came with 2 scope probes.  The software packages are built into the scope firmware, not external.  So, yes mine came with those packages.

**Q: Does it include fft? if so, what are the specifications of the included fft?**
A: Yes, there is FFT in Math operation, the FFT window includes: Rectangle, Hanning, Blackman,
Hamming, Flat Top, Triangle

**Q: Is the ultra scope sigma software free with ds1202ze?**
A: Yes, Ultra Scope is free to use with this device

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Amazing value for a fabulous scope
*by J***M on January 19, 2020*

In a world I used to know many years ago, this scope would have cost thousands of dollars. So here it is now, a scope that can practically do anything for a fraction of the olden days cost and I am not exaggerating. 200 MHz bandwidth is pretty astounding at this price. It has measurements, deep storage, big screen, print screen, and a depth of functions so deep that they defy my ability or patience to list them all. Go to Rigol's site and read the manual and data sheet for this little beast. It is astounding. Ok, enough hyperbole, here's what you may actually want to know. In short, nothing about this scope feels cheap. The scope feels like it has a quality build. No unusually wiggly knobs, for example. It has a reasonable weight. Scopes used to weigh 30 pounds or more and we had to roll them around on carts. This thing is no heavier than a lunchbox with a thermos inside. The handle supports the thing quite well. The plastic body is nicely molded to the contours of the inner chassis so it does not take up any more space than it needs to. The knobs and buttons are excellent for their smoothness and placement. Coming from analog scopes, it takes some time to become used to the lack of horizontal timebase markings and separate controls for each channel. It does not take long to become accustomed to this scope, though. Some of the legends on the screen are very tiny but luckily you can enlarge the font on many of them. Some folks like to gripe about fan noise in equipment and I agree that some are pretty loud. This fan is very docile and it does not annoy me at all. Even so, my hand cannot detect even the slightest warmth in the case after an hour's operation. The display is plenty bright. The display is big (wide) but the sides are permanently occupied by the legends for the soft keys. You can't turn them off as you can on some scopes. No big loss, in my opinion. The scope has built-in help for just about every function. It really is well written and actually, well, helpful. No printed manual comes with the scope. You have to download it. The scope has a speaker to announce button presses but it is inaudible to my old ears. The included probes are nice and not at all the junky things I was expecting. In operation, it took me a while to get used to dialing in for a stable signal. Not the scope's fault. After an hour or two I got adept at capturing the signal I wanted. In fact, if you get hopelessly lost, you can just press the Auto button and you've got about a 90% chance of locking on to your waveform. With practice, you don't need Auto any longer but it's nice to have it available. The scope as it is being sold now has all the options running with no time limit so you don't have to spend hundreds of dollars more optioning up the scope. My favorite thing about this scope, beside the beauty of its operation, is its ability to display dozens of measurement about the signal. I don't have to count squares and do math in my head to figure out the p-p or the rms. It even displays the frequency of the signal. If I have any complaint, it is that some of the functions are way down in the menus. However, once you learn where they are, the problem is over for you. You will spend some time learning to use this scope but the results will be worth it. What I don't like: Just small things. The multifunction knob is too sensitive. It is frustrating as it often overshoots the selection. While pressing the knob to finalize your selection it often jumps to an adjacent selection. This needs to be fixed in firmware. Also, it bothers me that unused positions behind the front panel illuminate during startup for buttons that are not even installed on this scope. The power cord is really thick. You would think this scope has the amp draw of an arc welder. The thick cord is a bit difficult to handle. As I said, small stuff all. This is a terrific scope. I recommend it and don't see how you could do better at this price.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Much better than expected
*by L***. on December 14, 2023*

For $300? That's ridiculous. This is comparable to one of those Tek lunchboxes. It's substantial, had more heft to it than I expected. Industrial design is pretty nice. The fan was audible even at first turn on. Almost like something was rubbing, but not that bad. Shake it and it goes away and then comes back when you shift the position around. I'm not concerned. The probes are pretty nice. Shrouded BNCs, nice pointy tips, decent lead length. These also feel substantial and good quality. The screen is spacious. I was kind of shocked when I took it out of the box. Some things are pretty small, like the vertical scale, but still legible. What's important is the capture is huge and bright. Brightness is set to 60% by default and that seems maybe a little too much. There's menus on either side of the trace, they never go away, but it doesn't feel cramped at all. I see in here where people had trouble with operation. Did not have that problem in the slightest. The knobs are not marked very well but duh. I had it mastered in ten minutes. There's some stuff that is less than intuitive, for instance changing variables in the menus when there's more than one. The UI logic seems pretty sound. Previous menu is always selected next, vertical control closes open menus (with selected variables), single automatically lights stop, stuff like that. Storage is easy, so many maths, saves to png, types A and B and an RJ45. There's all kinds of stuff I'm never going to use. I'm never connecting this to a network. It's in my garage. So I will likely never press the print button. Will I ever use a delayed trigger? Not likely either, I'm troubleshooting audio equipment. I didn't rate the accuracy because I lack a standard. I guess I could compare it to my old Fluke 87 III that hasn't been calibrated in two decades. Or maybe not. I just want to get to probing things. Is that so wrong?

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Top of the line for the price
*by S***N on February 11, 2026*

Very good machine for a beginner and experienced.

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*Product available on Desertcart Japan*
*Store origin: JP*
*Last updated: 2026-04-23*