HP VXI E1432A manual HP E1432A Triggering, Auto Trigger circuitry, Source trigger, Tach trigger

Models: VXI E1432A

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HP E1432A User's Guide

Using the HP E1432A

HP E1432A Triggering.

The following is a short discussion of triggering for the HP E1432A.

Triggering is defined as the transition from the armed state to the triggered state. This transition is caused by a low going edge on a TTL trigger line. The function hpe1432_getTtltrgLines selects which of the eight TTL trigger lines is to be used.

The low-going transition of the TTL trig line can be caused by any of the following items:

trigger type

enabling function

the AUTO TRIGGER circuitry

hpe1432_setAutoTrigger

the hpe1432_triggerMeasure function

hpe1432_triggerMeasure

a source trigger

hpe1432_setTriggerChannel

a tach trigger

hpe1432_setTriggerChannel

an external trigger

hpe1432_setTriggerExt

an input level or bound trigger event

hpe1432_setTriggerChannel

 

and hpe1432_setTriggerMode

Each of these trigger sources can be enabled or disabled independently, so quite complex trigger setups are possible. In all cases, however, the first trigger event kicks off the measurement and the following trigger events become superfluous.

Note that for hpe1432_setAutoTrigger the setting

HPE1432_MANUAL_TRIGGER really means “don’t auto trigger” not “expect a manual trigger”.

For single-HP E1432A systems, the TTL trigger signal is not connected to the VXI backplane. For multiple HP E1432A systems, the hpe1432_initMeasure function connects the HP E1432A trigger lines to the VXI backplane, and at that point, your selection of which TTL trigger lines through hpe1432_getTtltrgLines is relevant. Multiple mainframe systems will need to account for the unidirectional nature of the inter-mainframe MXI extenders which will prevent all but the “upstream” mainframe from triggering the system.

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Page 63
Image 63
HP VXI E1432A manual HP E1432A Triggering, Auto Trigger circuitry, Source trigger, Tach trigger