National Instruments NI 653 Series User Manual page 119

High-speed digital i/o devices
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Appendix E
Optimizing Your Transfer Rates
Obtaining the Fastest Transfer Rates
NI 653X User Manual
Table E-1. Peak Transfer Rates Based on Mode and Protocol Used (Continued)
Mode/Protocol
Handshaking Long Pulse
Handshaking Trailing-Edge Pulse
Handshaking Burst
Pattern I/O
To achieve the highest transfer rates possible, consider the following:
Burst mode is the fastest handshaking protocol. You can further
increase speed by using short cables.
Finite transfer is faster than continuous transfer.
Minimize the number of other I/O devices active in the system. Your
system bus should be as free as possible from unrelated activity.
Use the NI 6534, which has onboard memory. If you are using an
NI 6533, you can connect it to an external FIFO using the burst
handshaking protocol and clock data out of the FIFO to the peripheral
device.
Output looping from the NI 6534 onboard memory is faster than
regenerating output from the NI 6533.
DMA transfers are faster than interrupt-driven transfers, especially for
pattern I/O. Refer to Table E-2 to determine whether your device
supports DMA transfers. If DMA transfers are available, the software
uses DMA transfers by default.
E-2
Peak Rate (MS/s)
2.86
1.67
20
20
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