ADC and DAC Trigger This is the signal or impetus that initiates or terminates an Acquisition. Essentially the Trigger Starts or Stops the ADC or DAC PACER Clock.
ADC Channel Configuration RAM This is the term used for the ADC’s Channel, Gain, Range, and Input Configuration lookup table. The length of this table can be anywhere from 1 element to 176 elements. When an ACQUISITION is in process, the board will sequentially go through this list to determine the channel and gain setting for the next conversion. Thus, channels may be sampled in any order and at any gain. Note, however, that for maximum performance, it is recommended that channels with like gains be grouped together in the sample sequence.
ADC and DAC DMA Short for Direct Memory Access, DMA is the most
Clocking the ADC
The source of the ADC clock can be a Pacer Clock or an External Event (ADCLKIN).
ADC Pacer Clocking
A series of A/D conversions may be controlled by the
ADC External Event Clocking
Conversions may also be caused by an external event. ADCLKIN is an edge sensitive input that can be programmed to cause conversions. The ADCLKIN is selectable as either rising or falling edge sensitive. Once an ADC clock is received, the Analog input is immediately sampled. Converted data will become available within 5 microseconds (max). Any attempt to clock the ADC while an A/D conversion is currently running will result in a Clock Error.
ADC Maximum Clock Rate
The maximum rate which the ADC should be clocked and retain optimal accuracy will vary depending on several factors. These include ADC resolution
DaqBoard/500 Series boards
The second factor involves the
When changing channels [even if the input signal is static] the
Each time a conversion is initiated, the ADC goes into hold mode and the
988994 | DaqBoard/500 Series |