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Hantek 6022BE vs OWON HDS2202S

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

Hantek

$65

vs

OWON

$439

Spec Winner

OWON HDS2202S

Wins on 6 of 7 spec categories

Spec-by-Spec Comparison

SpecHantek 6022BEOWON HDS2202S
Bandwidth20 MHz200 MHz
Sample Rate0.048 GSa/s1 GSa/s
Channels22
Memory Depth1 Mpts8 Mpts
Display SizeN/A3.5"
Weight0.2 kg0.5 kg
Price$65$439
Rating4.5/107.0/10
Protocol DecoderNoYes
Function GenNoYes
WiFiNoNo
BatteryNoYes
Buy on Amazon · $65Buy on Amazon · $439

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

OWON HDS2202S

Pros

  • 200MHz bandwidth in a handheld form factor — genuinely impressive
  • Built-in multimeter and function generator in the same device
  • Battery powered — actual field-ready portability
  • Protocol decoding for SPI, I2C, and UART out of the box
  • Deep memory for a handheld — exceptional for field capture work

Cons

  • 3.5-inch screen is uncomfortably small for complex waveform analysis
  • Only 2 channels — limits simultaneous signal debugging
  • Button interface can feel clunky after using a touchscreen scope
  • At ~$439, you're in benchtop scope territory — consider your priorities
  • OWON's documentation is sparser than Rigol or Siglent

Our Verdicts

Hantek 6022BE

The Hantek 6022BE is the bare minimum USB oscilloscope — and I mean that literally, not as a compliment. At ~$65, 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 $65 ceiling and just need to verify signals exist, this will do — but you'll outgrow it fast.

OWON HDS2202S

The OWON HDS2202S is an impressive piece of kit for field and portable work — 200MHz bandwidth, protocol decoding, a built-in multimeter and function generator, and battery power in a package that fits in a jacket pocket. At ~$439 though, you need to be honest with yourself about how you'll use it. That budget also buys you a Rigol DS1054Z with 4 channels and a 7-inch display for bench work. The HDS2202S makes sense if portability is a genuine requirement — automotive diagnostics, field service, under-the-hood debugging — rather than just bench work in a small space. For primary bench use at this price, a benchtop scope is the better tool.

Hantek 6022BE

$65

OWON HDS2202S

$439

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