Supported Remote Interfaces; Comparison Of The Communication Interfaces - Keithley 2450 Reference Manual

Interactive sourcemeter instrument
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Model 2450 Interactive SourceMeter® Instrument Reference Manual

Supported remote interfaces

The Model 2450 supports the following remote interfaces:
GPIB: IEEE-488 instrumentation general purpose interface bus
USB: Type B USB connection
Ethernet: Local area network ethernet communications
TSP-Link: A high-speed trigger synchronization and communication bus that test system builders
can use to connect multiple instruments in a master and subordinate configuration.
For details about TSP-Link, see

Comparison of the communication interfaces

The following topics discuss some of the advantages and disadvantages of the communication
interfaces that are available for the Model 2450.
Simplicity
The GPIB interface is the simplest configuration. Connections are simple, and the only necessary
software configuration is setting the instrument address.
An ethernet network is a simple configuration if you can use the automatic settings. It is more
complicated if you need to set it up manually. If you must set up your ethernet network manually, you
need some knowledge of networking. In addition, your corporate information technology (IT)
department may have restrictions that prevent using an ethernet network.
A USB interface is also simple to set up. However, it requires an instrument-specific device driver to
communicate with the instrument. This can limit the operating systems that are available for use with
the instrument.
Triggering
The GPIB interface provides the fastest, most consistent triggering. It has the lowest trigger latency of
the available communication types. Trigger latency is the time that it takes the trigger to go from the
computer to the instrument. GPIB also allows you to send triggers to multiple instruments
simultaneously.
If you use a USB interface, it is difficult to synchronize triggers that are sent to multiple instruments.
For applications that require synchronized triggering, you must use digital I/O. The trigger latency with
a USB interface is higher than latency with a GPIB interface, but it is lower and more consistent than
latency with an ethernet interface.
Transfer rate
Of the available interfaces, USB has the fastest transfer rate, followed by the ethernet and GPIB
interfaces. The GPIB interface, however, offers the most consistent transfer rate.
Instrument naming
Names for instruments that are named through NI-VISA
instrument names are not human-readable.
2450-901-01 Rev. B/September 2013
TSP-Link System Expansion Interface
TM
Section 2: General operation
(on page 3-118).
are in a human-readable format. USB
2-45

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