Thank you for your questions.
1. If you use a sound card to measure the frequency response of a DUT (Device Under Test), you can measure up to 96kHz if the sound card has a sampling rate of 192kHz and a bandwidth of around 96kHz. Please check the sound card's specifications. You can also use our products VT DSOs to measure the frequency response of a DUT. These DSOs have an analog bandwidth well above audio frequency range.
2. The lowest S/N it can measure depends on the hardware used. If you use a sound card for audio measurements, you can do a loopback test to check the audio parameters of the sound card itself first. Some examples are here:
http://www.virtins.com/doc/D1004/EMU_Tr ... _D1004.pdfhttp://www.virtins.com/doc/D1007/EMU_0204_Report.pdfAudio parameters such as noise level and distortion cannot be compensated using software, and thus the quality of the measurement hardware must be better than the DUT in order to get meaningful results. On the other hand, frequency response can be compensated by the software .
3. Our current USB Oscilloscope products are well suited for audio frequency response test. When they are used for THD and Noise measurements, please bear in mind that they can only be used to measure those DUTs which have worse performance than the USB oscilloscopes. Please check the respective USB DSO's specifications.