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Hantek 6022BE vs Rigol DS1104Z-S Plus

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 DS1104Z-S Plus

Rigol

$699

Buy on Amazon

Spec Winner

Rigol DS1104Z-S Plus

Wins on 7 of 8 spec categories

Spec-by-Spec Comparison

SpecHantek 6022BERigol DS1104Z-S Plus
Bandwidth20 MHz100 MHz
Sample Rate0.048 GSa/s1 GSa/s
Channels24
Memory Depth1 Mpts12 Mpts
Display SizeN/A7"
Weight0.2 kg3.2 kg
Price$85.29$699
Rating4.5/107.0/10
Protocol DecoderNoYes
Function GenNoYes
WiFiNoNo
BatteryNoNo
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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 DS1104Z-S Plus

Pros

  • 100MHz bandwidth with 4 channels — no bandwidth hack needed
  • Built-in 25MHz function generator saves desk space and cost
  • Same excellent trigger set as the DS1054Z
  • Protocol decoding (SPI, I2C, UART) included
  • Proven platform for teaching labs that need scope plus signal generator

Cons

  • At ~$699, it is no longer the obvious value play next to newer touchscreen scopes
  • Same dated interface as the DS1054Z — no touchscreen
  • No WiFi or CAN/LIN decoding at this price
  • The DS1000Z platform is aging compared to the DHO series

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 DS1104Z-S Plus

The DS1104Z-S Plus is the DS1054Z with the limitations officially removed: full 100MHz bandwidth and a built-in 25MHz function generator. At ~$699, it's the premium version of a proven platform that has a decade of community support behind it. The problem in 2026 is that newer touchscreen scopes have made the DS1000Z platform feel dated. The DHO924S costs more now, but it brings 250MHz bandwidth, a 7-inch IPS touchscreen, WiFi, 50Mpt memory, and a much more modern workflow. I'd only choose the DS1104Z-S Plus if you're buying for a teaching lab with specific software integration requirements, or if you specifically need the proven DS1000Z platform.

Hantek 6022BE

$85.29

Buy on Amazon

Rigol DS1104Z-S Plus

$699

Buy on Amazon

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