Theory of Operation
Main Board
Acquisition System
3–4
The Main board is also called the acquisition board. The Main board of the
4-channel oscilloscopes is essentially two 2-channel oscilloscopes tied together
through a common microprocessor, and some special interconnects to support
combining the display and trigger systems. The focus of the Main board
discussion is the 2-channel system, with differences for the 4-channel models
noted as necessary.
At a minimum, the Main board contains attenuators, an amplifier ASIC, a
digitizer/trigger system ASIC, a signal processing/display/system services ASIC,
RAM, flash PROM, a system microprocessor, USB controller, USB RAM, system
communication RAM, and special power supplies. For a 4-channel oscilloscope,
the attenuators are duplicated. Most of the other aspects of the circuitry remain
unchanged.
Signals from the channel 1 and channel 2 and other input connectors pass through
attenuators and an AC-coupling switch to the amplifier ASIC. The Ext Trig input
has an abbreviated version of this path, lacking some of the attenuator settings
and the AC coupling switch.
The amplifier ASIC contains buffers and variable gain amplifiers, as well as
filters that provide 20 MHz bandwidth limiting. The task of the amplifier ASIC
is to convert from a 1 MΩ single-ended environment in the front end to a much
lower impedance differential (and thus less noise-sensitive) environment for the
acquisition process. The amplifier ASIC assures that the input signal is amplified
to a level that will allow the fullest possible use of the digitizer.
The acquisition ASIC contains samplers and peak detectors for each input
channel, a common amplifier, an A/D converter, and the trigger logic. The
digitized waveform samples are transferred to the processing and display ASIC.
In 4-channel systems, the two acquisition ASICs are interconnected so that a
trigger on one ASIC can cause a trigger on the other.
The processor system adds the microprocessor and flash PROM to the processing
and display system. The processor system interprets the front-panel control
changes detected by the display ASIC, provides control parameters based on
user setting requests, computes waveform measurements, and manages the USB
interfaces via the dedicated USB controller. Saved setups, waveforms, and
calibration constants are stored in nonvolatile memory sections within the flash
PROM. The processor system shares DRAM with the display system.
TDS2000C Series Oscilloscope Service Manual
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