Product Description:
Tektronix THS720P POWERSCOUT; 100MHZ HANDHELD DRT SCOPE/ DMM - CERTIFICATE OF TRACEABLE CALIBRATION STANDARD
The Tektronix THS720P oscilloscope is a graph-displaying device – it draws a graph of an electrical signal. In most applications, the graph shows how signals change over time: the vertical (Y) axis represents voltage and the horizontal (X) axis represents time. The intensity or brightness of the display is sometimes called the Z axis.
The Tektronix THS720P oscilloscope's simple graph can tell you many things about a signal, such as: the time and voltage values of a signal, the frequency of an oscillating signal, the “moving parts” of a circuit represented by the signal, the frequency with which a particular portion of the signal is occurring relative to, other portions, whether or not a malfunctioning component is distorting the signal, how much of a signal is direct current (DC) or alternating current (AC) and how much of the signal is noise and whether the noise is changing with time.
The TekScope THS700 Series Scope/DMM combines a full-featured real-time oscilloscope with a True RMS digital multimeter in rugged, battery-operated instruments. Scope and meter modes can operate simultaneously and independently on the same or separate signals. The high-resolution, backlit display and pop-up menus make it easy for users to take full advantage of the instrument's many features. These include cursors, video trigger, voltage and resistance measurements and storage of waveforms, data and instrument setups. In addition, they offer the most comprehensive triggering capabilities - external trigger and extensive triggering including delay, pulse width and video.
The THS700A Series is ideal for electronic applications - at the bench or at the site.
The THS700A Series shares measurement features with the THS720P Scope/DMM which includes features to address the needs of electric/power electronics measurements.
True power W
Apparent power VA
Reactive power VAR
V Volts (RMS, Peak)
A Amps (RMS, Peak)
Total harmonic distortion as a percentage of the fundamental THD-F
Total harmonic distortion of the RMS of the input signal THD-R
Power factor PF
Displacement power factor DPF
Phase difference between the voltage and current PHI
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