Rigol DS1102/4B User Manual page 77

Ds1000b series digital oscilloscopes
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Trigger Key points
1. Trigger Source:
Trigger occurs from several sources: Input channels (CH1, CH2, CH3, CH4), AC
Line, Ext, Ext/5.
z
CH1, CH2, CH3, CH4:
It is the most commonly used trigger source. The channel works when it is
selected as a trigger source whatever displayed.
z Ext Trig:
The instrument can be triggered from an external source while acquiring data
from CH1, CH2, CH3, and CH4. For example, be a trigger source with an
external clock or a signal from another part of the test circuit. The Ext, Ext/5
trigger sources use an external trigger signal connected to the EXT TRIG
connector. Ext uses the signal directly; it has a trigger level range of -0.6 V to
+0.6 V. The EXT/5 trigger source attenuates the signal by 5X, which extends the
trigger level range to -3V to +3 V allowing the oscilloscope to trigger on a larger
signal.
z
AC Line:
AC power can be used to display signals related to the power line frequency,
such as lighting equipment and power supply devices. The oscilloscope gets
triggered on its AC power input, but an AC trigger signal is not required. When
AC Line is selected as a trigger source, the oscilloscope automatically set
coupling to DC, set trigger level to 0V.
2. Sweep Mode:
The sweep mode determines how the oscilloscope behaves in the absence of a
trigger event. The oscilloscope provides three trigger modes: Auto, Normal, and
Single.
z
Auto:
This sweep mode allows the oscilloscope to acquire waveforms even when it
does not detect a trigger condition. If no trigger condition occurs while the
oscilloscope is waiting for a specific period (as determined by the time-base
© 2008 RIGOL Technologies, Inc.
User's Guide for DS1000B Series
RIGOL
2-49

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