Skip to main content

Hantek 6022BE vs Rigol DHO924S

Head-to-head spec comparison to help you pick the right scope for your bench.

Hantek 6022BE

Hantek

$85.29

Buy on Amazon
vs
Rigol DHO924S

Rigol

$899

Buy on Amazon

Spec Winner

Rigol DHO924S

Wins on 7 of 8 spec categories

Spec-by-Spec Comparison

SpecHantek 6022BERigol DHO924S
Bandwidth20 MHz250 MHz
Sample Rate0.048 GSa/s1.25 GSa/s
Channels24
Memory Depth1 Mpts50 Mpts
Display SizeN/A7"
Weight0.2 kg3.8 kg
Price$85.29$899
Rating4.5/109.0/10
Protocol DecoderNoYes
Function GenNoYes
WiFiNoYes
BatteryNoNo
Buy on AmazonBuy on Amazon

Pros & Cons

Hantek 6022BE

Pros

  • Cheapest USB oscilloscope that actually works
  • Tiny and portable — fits in a laptop bag or jacket pocket
  • Works with open-source OpenHantek software (much better than official drivers)
  • Bus-powered via USB — no wall adapter needed
  • 1Mpt memory depth is genuinely decent for this price

Cons

  • Only 20MHz bandwidth — severely limiting for most real work
  • 48MSa/s sample rate means aliasing starts well below 20MHz
  • Requires a PC to operate — useless in the field without a laptop
  • Bundled software is mediocre; use OpenHantek instead
  • No protocol decoding of any kind

Rigol DHO924S

Pros

  • 250MHz bandwidth with 4 channels and a modern touchscreen workflow
  • 7-inch IPS touchscreen with 1024x600 resolution — sharp and responsive
  • 50Mpt memory depth for extended captures
  • Built-in function generator and WiFi connectivity included
  • Modern phone-like interface has almost no learning curve
  • Protocol decoding for SPI, I2C, UART, CAN, and LIN

Cons

  • 1.25GSa/s sample rate could be higher given the 250MHz bandwidth
  • Newer platform means less community documentation than the DS1054Z
  • Some early firmware bugs have been reported — check version before updating
  • Fan can be audible in a quiet room

Our Verdicts

Hantek 6022BE

The Hantek 6022BE is the bare minimum USB oscilloscope — and I mean that literally, not as a compliment. At around $85, you get 2 channels and 20MHz of bandwidth piped through your laptop screen, which is enough to verify that a PWM signal exists or check audio frequencies. The 20MHz limit is genuinely painful: you can't reliably see rise times on 3.3V Arduino signals, and anything SPI-related at normal speeds is already at the edge of what this scope can resolve. Skip the official software and use OpenHantek instead — it's actively maintained and much better. If you can stretch to the Analog Discovery 3, the difference is night and day. If you're truly at a sub-$100 ceiling and just need to verify signals exist, this will do — but you'll outgrow it fast.

Rigol DHO924S

The Rigol DHO924S is no longer the default hobbyist oscilloscope recommendation now that Amazon pricing is around $899. The 7-inch IPS touchscreen is still excellent — pinch to zoom, tap to place cursors, swipe to scroll through captures — and the spec stack is serious: 250MHz bandwidth, 4 channels, 50Mpt memory, a function generator, WiFi, and CAN/LIN protocol decoding. But at this price it belongs in the premium-upgrade tier, not the beginner tier. Buy it if you need the bandwidth, mixed-signal-ready feature set, and modern Rigol workflow. Most first-time buyers should start with the DS1054Z or DHO804 instead.

Hantek 6022BE

$85.29

Buy on Amazon

Rigol DHO924S

$899

Buy on Amazon

More Comparisons