Oscium’s iMSO-104 hardware offers to turn your iPhone, iPad, or iPod Touch into a 12MSPS digital oscilloscope with an analog bandwidth of 5MHz. For folks like me with limited desk space & shifting work environments, that’s an interesting offer indeed. Oscium sent over a test model to take for a spin, so onto the spinning!
Hardware
Included tangibles are as follows:
- iMSO-104 Mixed Signal Oscilloscope Hardware
- 1x/10 Analog Probe
- Logic Harness (4 Digital + 1 Ground)
- SMD Grabbers (4 Digital + 1 Ground)
- Screwdriver for Analog Waveform Compensation Adjustment
- Analog tip covers (2 pieces)
The core hardware, based on the Cypress PSoC 3 chip, is housed in a slim enclosure with requisite Apple dock connector, SMB jack for the analog probe, and 5-pin male header to accommodate 4 digital channels + ground. The included set of probes appear well-built, and I estimate they’d withstand the level abuse my other test equipment is subject to. The unit also includes a small blue LED power indicator which turns off whenever the device’s related software becomes inactive.
Software

The iMSO’s software portion is available for free as a Universal app and includes an interactive demo mode to give you an idea of how the unit handles analog signals. The app implements standard digital scope functionality (zoom, trigger, cursor/measurement) with thankfully little UI clutter. In addition to standard menu controls, users can employ familiar pinch-to-zoom gestures as well as control voltage trigger level via onscreen sliders, and double-tap to toggle display infos.
Usage
Right off the bat, I was intrigued at the thought of using the iPad’s 9.7″ display and touch input for highly portable ‘scoping. And yes, viewing a sinewave in such a manner does feel satisfyingly slick and moreover, imbues Apple’s hardware with an air of technical sophistication rarely achieved while editing a Pages document or playing Angry Birds. The iMSO software was easily controllable via my iPhone, but I really can’t imagine using it much on that platform when given the option of a much larger display.
While it won’t replace my big ol’ 50MHz CRT benchtop dinosaur, the iMSO’s comparatively humble 5MHz analog bandwidth works well for inspecting audio signals (which I do quite often). Additionally, max voltage limits on the devices inputs (±40V analog 10x, -0.5V/+13V digital) mean I’m likely to reserve use exclusively for low-power audio work. On the digital side, the unit did prove capable when I attempted peeking in on some serial communications between an Arduino board and MCP4921 DAC chip.
The fact that iOS devices use a single port for both power & data, means you’ll have to rely on battery power while using the iMSO. Thankfully, the device + software went easy on my iPad 2′s battery – so power is likely only a concern for those who plan on marathon testing/debugging sessions.
The ~$300 pricetag and bandwidth limitations will likely limit the iMSO’s initial audience – but if those points don’t pose a problem for you, well, this thing is pretty dang sweet. As the IMSO-104 is the first in its category, It will be interesting to see what future developments hold for iOS test equipment – see, we shall.


at that price/performance is this really anything but an excuse to get a company ipad?
They had better put in some really, really good input protection and isolation, or else I would be very worried about using this with my i-device.
Heh, for a $300 purchase, doubt a hipster would worry about zapping the phone.
The other comment is right, DSO quad is way better, this thing is not worthy.
Heh, for a $300 purchase, doubt a hipster would worry about zapping the phone.
The other comment is right, DSO quad is way better, this thing is not worthy.
5MHz? while you’re at it, why don’t you give me a nice paper cut and pour lemon juice on it? (…we’re closed)
Actually this device is fabulous on your iPhone. Yes, the screen is small and not as convenient as an iPad, but 1> the whole setup fits in your pockets (or single shirt pocket, behind the pocket protector) and 2> is super convenient when you’re perched on a ladder debugging some sensor equipment that is (as it always is) mounted inconveniently. I got one the week of ESC and it had paid for itself by the end of the week.
Fair point but considering the size of a DSO quad I can’t really see any benefits, especially when the quad outspecs this.
I carry my phone anyway. This thing sits in my case and I never need anything beyond 1 micro second resolution. Ever. It is always charged and most companies have iOS device charging stations in the forms of desk radio/media players every where.
From a practical standpoint, this little device is simply SWEET. Being “open” is meaningless to most professionals and has only meaning to hobbyists. Working is what counts. This does not replace a nice Tech DSO but in a pinch, when you are in the field, indispensable.
The $200 DSO quad is 72MS/s and doesn’t require additional hardware.
Not to mention it’s smaller than this+iPad. I just can’t see the appeal in this.
You mean DSO203. Awesome tool
While using your iPhone as a scope is pretty cool, there are some things to note:
- 12MSPS = 5MHz only if you’re looking at a 5MHz sine. Higher frequencies will not be resolved (Shannon-Nyquist anyone?), so a 5MHz square wave will look like a sine in this scope. To get the real bandwith, you have to calculate about 10-20 samples per wave, so you end up with 600kHz to 1.2MHz. And that still only shows you something that is recognizable (i.e. you can guess it’s a square wave that goes in), but you can’t judge distortion etc.
- single channel
- price tag
Bill Porter and Denise Lee pointed out that Seedstudio sells the DSO Quad, which offers 72MS/s, two analog channels, and 400V max voltage, is smaller than an iPhone, and costs 199$. I have that scope, and it allows you to recognize a square as a square up to about 3-4MHz, which is roughly consistent with the above. I think given that option, it’s hard to recommend the iPhone/iPad scope; in fact I wonder why it’s so expensive because the DSO Quad carries two probes, battery, screen etc.
But you can get a DS1052E for just $100 more (ignoring the cost of iPad/iPhone) which has true 50mhz bandwidth with 1GSa/s sample rate, this thing at 12MSa/s will give you what? 1mhz usable bandwidth? And surely it’s fittable on your desk if you can fit an iPad on your desk.
I can see no point in spending that on what is a essentially a toy.
AND the seedstudio DSO sports an onboard signal generator (10-20kHz Sine/Triangle/Saw/Square)
AND it’s open hardware! Got mine yesterday!
The screen is flimsy, though: background has a bad (strong) angular lateral dependency (interpupillary distance is enough to produce a difference for each eye).
Totally awesome. I have an old Parallax sold unit that I need to run Parallels on my mac to use.
Thanks!
John
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