Omega Network Card 208H User Manual

DAQP-208/208H/308  
Type II PCMCIA  
Data Acquisition Adapters  
Users Manual  
INTERFACE CARDS FOR PERSONAL COMPUTERS  
OMEGA ENGINEERING, INC.  
One Omega Drive  
P.O. Box 4047  
Tel: (203) 359-1660  
Fax: (203) 359-7700  
Toll free: 1-800-826-6342  
Stamford, CT 06907-4047  
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Servicing North America:  
USA:  
ISO 9001 Certified  
One Omega Drive, Box 4047  
Stamford, CT 06907-0047  
Tel: (203) 359-1660  
FAX: (203) 359-7700  
Canada:  
976 Bergar  
Laval (Quebec) H7L 5A1  
Tel: (514) 856-6928  
FAX: (514) 856-6886  
For immediate technical or application assistance:  
USA and Canada:  
Sales Service: 1-800-826-6342 / 1-800-TC-OMEGASM  
Customer Service: 1-800-622-2378/ 1-800-622-BESTSM  
Engineering Service: 1-800-872-9436 / 1-800-USA-WHENSM  
TELEX: 996404 EASYLINK: 62968934 CABLE: OMEGA  
Mexico and Latin America:  
Tel: (001) 800-826-6342  
FAX: (001) 203-359-7807  
En Espanol: (001) 203-359-7803  
Servicing Europe:  
Benelux:  
Postbus 8034, 1180 LA Amstelveen, The Netherlands  
Tel: (31) 20 6418405  
Toll Free in Benelux: 0800 0993344  
Czech Republic:  
France:  
ul.Rude armady 1868, 733 01 Karvina-Hraniee  
Tel: 42 (69) 6311899  
FAX: 42 (69) 6311114  
Toll Free: 0800-1-66342  
9, rue Denis Papin, 78190 Trappes  
Tel: (33) 130-621-400  
Toll Free in France: 0800-4-06342  
Germany/Austria:  
Daimlerstrasse 26, D-75392 Deckenpfronn, Germany  
Tel: 49 (07056) 3017  
Toll Free in Germany: 0130 11 21 66  
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United Kingdom:  
ISO 9002 Certified  
One Omega Drive, River Bend Technology Drive  
Northbank, Irlam, Manchester  
M44 5EX, England  
Tel: 44 (161) 777-6611  
FAX: 44 (161) 777-6622  
Toll Free in England: 0800-488-488  
It is the policy of OMEGA to comply with all worldwide safety and EMC/EMI regulations that apply.  
OMEGA is constantly pursuing certification of it’s products to the European New Approach  
Directives. OMEGA will add the CE mark to every appropriate device upon certification.  
The information contained in this document is believed to be correct but OMEGA Engineering, Inc.  
accepts no liability for any errors it contains, and reserves the right to alter specifications without  
notice. WARNING: These products are not designed for use in, and should not be used for, patient  
connected applications.  
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Notice  
The information contained in this document cannot be reproduced in any form without the  
written consent of Omega Engineering Inc. Any software programs accompanying this  
document can be used only in accordance with any licensing agreement(s) between Omega  
Engineering Inc. and the purchaser. Omega Engineering Inc. reserves the right to change this  
documentation or the product to which it refers at any time and without notice.  
The authors have taken due care in the preparation of this document and any associated  
software program(s). Every attempt has been made to ensure accuracy and completeness.  
Under no circumstances will Omega Engineering Inc. be liable for damages of any kind,  
incidental or consequential, in regard to or arising from the performance or form of the  
materials presented herein or in any software program(s) that may accompany this document.  
Omega Engineering Inc. encourages and appreciates feedback concerning this document.  
Please send any written comments to the Technical Support Department at the address listed  
on the cover of this document.  
Copyright ©2001  
by Omega Engineering Inc.  
All rights reserved. Printed in the U.S.A.  
IBM®, PC® and PC-AT® are trademarks of the International Business Machines Corporation.  
Windows®, MS-DOS®, Windows 95®, Windows 98®, Windows NT® and Windows 2000®  
are trademarks of the Microsoft Corporation. Other product and company names are  
registered trademarks or trademarks of their respective holders.  
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Table of Contents  
1. Introduction  
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8  
2. Hardware Configuration and Initial Setup  
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9  
2.1 Software Installation: Windows 95/98/2000 ® . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9  
2.1.1 Windows 2000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9  
2.1.2 Windows 98 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10  
2.1.3 Windows 95 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10  
2.1.4 Viewing Resources with Device Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11  
2.2 Software Installation: Windows NT 4.0 ® . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11  
2.3 Data Acquisition Software and Drivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12  
2.4 Software Installation: Windows 3.x and MS-DOS® . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13  
2.4.1 Client Driver for MS-DOS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14  
2.4.2 Enabler for MS-DOS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18  
3. Field Wiring  
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21  
3.1 UIO-37 Screw Terminal Block . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22  
3.2 CP-DAQPA Cable Assembly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23  
4. Theory of Operation  
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25  
4.1 DC/DC Power Supply . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25  
4.2 Analog Input Multiplexer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26  
4.3 Programmable Gain Control Amplifier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26  
4.4 Scan List Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27  
4.5 Trigger Circuit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28  
4.6 A/D Converter and Data FIFO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29  
4.7 Interrupt and Status . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30  
4.8 Digital I/O . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30  
4.9 A/D State Machine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31  
4.10 D/A Circuit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32  
4.11 Timer/Counter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32  
5. I/O Registers  
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34  
5.1 PCMCIA Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34  
5.1.1 Configuration and Option Register (COR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35  
5.1.2 Card Configuration and Status Register (CCSR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35  
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5.2 Address Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36  
5.2.1 Data FIFO Register (base + 0) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37  
5.2.2 Scan List Queue Register (base + 1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39  
5.2.3 Status Register (base + 2) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44  
5.2.4 Digital I/O Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45  
5.2.5 Pacer Clock (base + 4, + 5, + 6) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46  
5.2.6 Command Register (base + 7) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47  
5.2.7 D/A Data Port (base + 8, base + 9) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49  
5.2.8 Timer/Counter Port (base + 10, base + 11) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51  
5.2.9 Auxiliary Control Register (base + 15) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53  
5.2.10 Auxiliary Status Register (base + 15) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53  
6. Specifications  
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55  
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List of Figures and Tables  
Figure 3-1. DAQP Series Card Output Connector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21  
Figure 3-2. CP-DAQPA/UIO-37 D37 Pin Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22  
Figure 3-3. UIO-37 Terminal Block . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23  
Figure 3-4. DAQP Card with Accessories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24  
Figure 4-1. Transition Diagram of A/D Conversion Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31  
Figure 5-1. Pacer Clock Block Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46  
Table 2-1. Comparison Between Client Driver and Enabler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13  
Table 3-1. DAQP Series Card Cable Mapping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24  
Table 5-1. PCMCIA Configuration Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34  
Table 5-2. COR Bit Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35  
Table 5-3. CCSR Bit Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35  
Table 5-4. DAQP Series Card Address Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36  
Table 5-5. Data FIFO Register Bit Allocation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37  
Table 5-6. Data FIFO Operation Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37  
Table 5-7. Data FIFO Threshold Setting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38  
Table 5-8. Data FIFO Flag Status . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39  
Table 5-9. Scan List Queue Entry Bit Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39  
Table 5-10. Scan List Queue Programming Example 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40  
Table 5-11. Scan List Queue Programming Example 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40  
Table 5-12. Control Register Bit Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41  
Table 5-13. Status Register Bit Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44  
Table 5-14. Digital Output Register Bit Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45  
Table 5-15. Digital Input Register Bit Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45  
Table 5-16. Command Register Bit Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47  
Table 5-17. Data FIFO Threshold Setting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48  
Table 5-18. D/A Data Port Bit Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49  
Table 5-19. D/A Update Modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50  
Table 5-20. Timer/Counter Modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51  
Table 5-21. Auxiliary Control Register Bit Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53  
Table 5-22. Auxiliary Status Register Bit Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54  
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1. Introduction  
DAQP series cards are PCMCIA type II data acquisition adapters with 4 differential or 8  
single-ended analog input channels. The number of input channels can be expanded to 128  
when used with input expansion cards. DAQP series products include the DAQP-208, the  
DAQP-208H and the DAQP-308. Card features include:  
? Sampling rate up to 100 kHz with 12 or 16 bit resolution  
? 4 differential or 8 single-ended analog input channels, expandable to 128 channels  
? Two 12 bit D/A channels with direct or synchronized update  
? Bipolar input range up to ±10 volts with programmable gain of 1, 2, 4 or 8  
(DAQP-208/308) or gain of 1, 10, 100 or 1000 (DAQP-208H)  
? Programmable scan list with up to 2048 channel and gain entries, plus selectable scan  
speed of 10, 20 or 40 µs  
? Additional 16 bit timer/counter with auto reload, read-out/overflow latches and  
internal/external gate control and clock sources  
? Software, TTL or analog trigger with  
programmable threshold and  
pre-trigger capability  
Equipped with a 4K data FIFO, the  
DAQP card can achieve high speed data  
acquisition under various operating  
platforms. Also equipped with a 2048  
entry scan FIFO, the DAQP supports full  
speed, random order channel scanning  
and gain selection for all input channels  
including expansion channels.  
The DAQP card uses a 24-bit pacer clock and a programmable divide-by-2, by-10 or by-100  
pre-scaler. The pacer clock can be used with either an internal or external clock source.  
DAQP series cards are also equipped with two independent 12 bit D/A output channels with  
a bipolar range of -5 to +5 volts. D/A channels can be updated directly when writing the  
corresponding D/A port (direct mode) or simultaneously with a synchronization signal.  
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2. Hardware Configuration and Initial Setup  
2.1 Software Installation: Windows 95/98/2000 ®  
An “INF” file (daqpcard.inf) is included on the root directory of the DaqSuite CD to allow easy  
configuration in the Windows environment. Windows uses the “INF” file to determine the  
system resources required by the DAQP card, searches for available resources to fill the  
requirements and then updates the Windows hardware registry with entries to allocate the  
resources. Follow the instructions below to configure your DAQP series card under  
Windows.  
Card Information Structure (CIS) Differences  
DAQP series cards come with 12 and 16 bit versions. Each version may also have different  
product names and descriptions depending on the manufacturer or vendor name associated  
with the card. This results in differences in the CIS for the specific DAQP card version.  
Windows will configure the DAQP card in the same manner regardless of CIS differences. It is  
strongly recommended that the DaqSuite CD “INF” file be used to configure the DAQP card  
and that it should only be used if Windows 95/98/2000 does not recognize the card upon  
insertion. It is not necessary to install the INF file if Windows recognizes the card when  
inserted due to the presence of an older INF file in the system. Do not try to modify, merge,  
rename or delete the system INF files. If difficulties are encountered during installation,  
contact the technical support department at the number shown on the cover of this manual.  
2.1.1 Windows 2000  
1. Insert the DAQP card into any available PC Card socket. The first time a new PC  
Card type is installed the “New Hardware Found” window will open. Click Next  
to continue.  
2. The New Hardware Found window provides several options to configure the  
DAQP card. Select the “Search for a suitable driver for my device” radio button.  
Click Next to continue.  
3. Insert the DaqSuite CD, select the “CD-ROM drive” check box and click Next to  
continue. Windows 2000 will browse the CD until it finds the file ”x:\daqpcard.inf“,  
where “x” is the CD-ROM drive letter. Click Next to continue.  
4. When Windows finishes the configuration process, click Finish to exit the New  
Hardware Found Wizard.  
5. Hardware Configuration is not complete until the user has run the desired driver  
support installation from the DaqSuite CD demo. This support installation is  
required to install Windows 2000 drivers for your DAQP card. Refer to Section 2.3:  
Data Acquisition Software and Drivers for a list of driver installation options.  
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2.1.2 Windows 98  
1. Insert the DAQP card into any available PC Card socket. The first time a new PC  
Card type is installed the “Add New Hardware Wizard” window will open. Click  
Next to continue.  
2. The Add New Hardware Wizard provides several options to configure the DAQP  
card. Select the recommended option radio button: “Search for the best driver for  
your device”. Click Next to continue.  
3. An Install from Disk dialog box will open. Insert the DaqSuite CD, either type in or  
browse for the correct CD-ROM drive letter and then click OK. Windows 98 will  
browse the CD until it finds the file ”x:\daqpcard.inf“, where “x” is the CD-ROM  
drive letter. Click Next to continue.  
4. When Windows finishes the configuration process, click Finish to exit the New  
Hardware Found Wizard.  
5. Hardware configuration is not complete until the user has run the desired driver  
support installation from the DaqSuite CD demo. This support installation is  
required to install Windows 98 drivers for your DAQP card. Refer to Section 2.3:  
Data Acquisition Software and Drivers for a list of driver installation options.  
2.1.3 Windows 95  
1. Insert the DAQP card into any available PC Card socket. The first time a new PC  
Card type is installed the “New Hardware Found” window will open. Select the  
“Driver from disk provided by hardware manufacturer” radio button and click OK  
to continue.  
2. An Install from Disk dialog box will open. Insert the DaqSuite CD, either type in or  
browse for the correct CD-ROM drive letter and then click OK. Windows 95 will  
browse the CD until it finds the file ”x:\daqpcard.inf“, where “x” is the CD-ROM  
drive letter and then proceed to configure the hardware.  
3. Hardware configuration is not complete until the user has run the desired driver  
support installation from the DaqSuite CD demo. This support installation is  
required to install Windows 95 drivers for your DAQP card. Refer to Section 2.3:  
Data Acquisition Software and Drivers for a list of driver installation options.  
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2.1.4 Viewing Resources with Device Manager  
Follow the instructions provided here to view resources used by the DAQP card using the  
“Device Manager” utility in Windows.  
1. Double click the My Computer icon located on the Windows desktop and then  
double click the Control Panel icon. Double click the System icon to open the  
System Properties window.  
2. Click the “Device Manager” tab located at the top of the dialog box. (Windows 2000  
users must click the “Hardware” tab and then press the “Device Manager” button).  
The Device Manager lists all hardware devices inside the Windows registry.  
Additional information is available on any of these devices by clicking on the  
device name and then selecting the Properties button.  
3. Double click the device group “Data_ Acquisition”. The DAQP card model name  
should appear on the list below this category. Double click on the model name to  
open the Hardware Properties window.  
4. Click the Resources tab located along the top of the dialog box to view the resources  
Windows has allocated to the DAQP card.  
2.2 Software Installation: Windows NT 4.0 ®  
Windows NT 4.0 does not use the “Add New Hardware” wizard to configure new hardware.  
Once the DAQP card is installed, run the desired driver support installation from the  
DaqSuite CD demo to install Windows NT 4.0 drivers. During the installation process, NT 4.0  
registry entries are created to automatically start and run your hardware. Refer to Section 2.3:  
Data Acquisition Software and Drivers for a list of driver installation options. After installing  
the drivers, the base address and IRQ level must be determined and saved in the  
corresponding configuration file for the resources to be assigned to the device. Determine  
what I/O Port number and IRQ levels are available from the windows NT diagnostics. Save  
these to the device's configuration file (see section 2.2 in the daqdrive manual for a description  
on how to use the configuration utility). You must reboot at this point for these setting to take  
effect and to determine installation success. To determine if your DAQP card is correctly  
installed and to view its assigned resources, follow the instructions listed below.  
1. From within Windows NT 4.0 , Select Start | Programs | Administrative Tools  
(Common) | Windows NT Diagnostics.  
2. When the Windows NT Diagnostics window opens, click the “Resources” tab  
located at the top of the dialog box. Press the Devices button located in the bottom  
right corner. The DAQP card driver name is “DAQPDRV”. This name should be  
listed under the category “Device”.  
3. To view the resources assigned to the DAQP card, press the IRQ and I/O Port  
buttons at the bottom of the Windows NT Diagnostics window.  
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To remove the DAQP card from your Windows NT 4.0 system, run the associated driver  
support uninstallation program using the Add/Remove Programs icon located in the  
Control Panel folder. (This will remove all registry entries applicable to your hardware).  
When the uninstallation is complete, shut down your computer and remove the hardware. To  
verify these actions, reboot and follow steps 1 and 2 above to ensure the “DAQPDRV” listing  
no longer appears under the “Device” category.  
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2.3 Data Acquisition Software and Drivers  
Data acquisition software and driver support installations are available from the DaqSuite CD  
demo main menu.  
1. Quatech’s DaqEZ? - This software package was specifically designed to support  
all Quatech’s data acquisition adapter functions and is included free of charge with  
your hardware. DaqEZ is an easy to use application that requires no programming  
knowledge and allows the user to graphically acquire and display real time data  
using customized channel labels, charts and displays. (Includes hardware drivers  
for Windows 95 or 98).  
2. DASYTEC’s DASYLab - DASYLab is designed to solve sophisticated data  
acquisition and control tasks quickly. Module symbols representing  
inputs/outputs, display instruments or operations to be performed are inserted  
into a work sheet and graphically connected. This approach allows complex  
applications to be constructed without programming knowledge.  
The DaqSuite CD includes a fully functional 30 day evaluation version of DASYLab.  
(Includes hardware drivers for Windows 95, 98, 2000 and NT 4.0).  
3. 3rd Party Driver Support - Hardware drivers for Windows 95, 98, 2000 and NT  
4.0 are available for the following 3rd party data acquisition software packages:  
DASYLab from DASYTEC? - Run this installation if DASYLab software is already  
installed on the system that will use your Quatech hardware.  
LabVIEW? from National Instruments?  
- Run this installation if LabVIEW  
software is already installed on the system that will use your Quatech hardware.  
TestPoint? from Capital Equipment Corporation - Run this installation if TestPoint  
software is already installed on the system that will use your Quatech hardware.  
4. Drivers/Programming Support - Quatech’s Daqdrive? provides hardware  
drivers, a hardware configuration utility and data acquisition programming  
examples for Microsoft? and Borland? C/C++, Visual Basic? and Borland  
Dephi? . (Includes hardware drivers for Windows 95, 98, 2000 and NT 4.0).  
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2.4 Software Installation: Windows 3.x and MS-DOS®  
Two software configuration programs are provided with the DAQP card: a Client Driver  
named DAQPA_CL.SYS and a card Enabler named DAQPA_EN.EXE. Either one of these  
programs may be used to configure the card but only one may be used at a time. Table  
2-1 below highlights the differences between the Client Driver and the Enabler programs.  
Detailed instructions for installation and usage of the Client Driver and Enabler programs are  
discussed the following sections.  
Table 2-1. Comparison Between Client Driver and Enabler  
Client Driver  
DAQPA_CL.SYS  
Enabler  
DAQPA_EN.EXE  
Interfaces to PCMCIA Card and  
Socket Services software (PCMCIA  
host adapter independent)  
Interfaces directly to Intel 82365SL and  
other PCIC compatible PCMCIA host  
adapters  
Allows automatic configuration of  
DAQP card upon insertion (Hot  
Swapping)  
Does not support automatic  
configuration of DAQP card upon  
insertion (Hot Swapping)  
Requires PCMCIA Card and Socket Does not require PCMCIA Card and  
Services software Socket Services software  
On systems with Card and Socket Services installed, the Client Driver is the preferred method  
of installation. To determine if Card and Socket Services software is installed, install the  
DAQP series Client Driver. When loaded, the Client Driver will display an error message if  
Card and Socket Services software is not detected.  
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2.4.1 Client Driver for MS-DOS  
For systems using MS-DOS and PCMCIA Card and Socket Services software, a Client Driver  
named “DAQPA_CL.SYS” is provided to configure the DAQP series cards. PCMCIA Card  
and Socket Services software is not provided with your DAQP card, but is available from your  
vendor.  
Some versions of Card and Socket Services dated before 1993 do not support general purpose  
I/O cards. After careful installation of the Client Driver, if the DAQP card still does not  
configure or operate properly, an updated version of Card and Socket Services software may  
be required. The following procedures are used to install the DAQP series Client Driver:  
1. Copy the file DAQPA_CL.SYS located in the PCMCIA\DOS\CLIENTS directory of the  
DaqSuite CD onto the root directory of the system hard drive.  
2. Using an ASCII text editor, open the system's CONFIG.SYS file located in the root  
directory of the boot drive.  
3. Locate the line in the CONFIG.SYS file where Card and Socket Services software is  
installed.  
4. AFTER the line installing the Card and Socket Services software, add the following line  
to the CONFIG.SYS file:  
DEVICE = drive:\DAQPA_CL.SYS (options)  
where (options) are the DAQP series Client Driver command line options discussed on  
the following pages.  
5. Save the CONFIG.SYS file and exit the text editor.  
6. Insert the DAQP card into one of the system PCMCIA slots.  
NOTE: Since the DAQP series Client Driver supports "Hot Swapping", it is not  
necessary to have the DAQP card installed when booting the system. By inserting the  
card before booting, the Client Driver will report the card configuration during the boot  
process and thereby verify changes made to CONFIG.SYS.  
7. Reboot the system and note the message displayed when the Client Driver is loaded. If  
the Client Driver reports an “invalid command line option”, correct the entry in the  
CONFIG.SYS file and reboot the system again. If the Client Driver reports “Card and  
Socket Services not found”, then either Card and Socket Services software must be  
installed on the system or the DAQP series Enabler program must be used to configure  
the card. If the Client Driver reports the desired card configuration, the installation  
process is complete and the DAQP card may be removed and inserted from the system  
as desired. On each insertion into the PCMCIA socket, the DAQP card will  
automatically be reconfigured to the specified settings.  
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2.4.1.1 Client Driver Command Line Options  
The DAQP series Client Driver accepts up to eight command line arguments from the user to  
determine the configuration of the DAQP card. If any arguments are provided, the Client  
Driver will attempt to configure any DAQP card with the options specified in the order they  
are entered on the command line. Each argument must be enclosed in parenthesis and must  
be separated from other arguments by a space in the command line. Inside an argument, a  
comma (no space) should be used to separate the parameters from each other if there are two  
or more parameters. Within each argument, any or all of the following parameters may be  
specified:  
b address Specifies the base I/O address of the DAQP card in hexadecimal. Address”  
must be in the range 100H - 3F8H and must reside on an even 8-byte boundary  
(“address” must end in 0 or 8). If this option is omitted, a base address will be  
assigned by Card and Socket Services software.  
i irq  
Specifies the interrupt level (IRQ) of the DAQP card in hexadecimal. “Irq” must  
be one of the following values: 3, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 15 or 0 if no IRQ if  
desired. If this option is omitted, an interrupt level will be assigned by Card  
and Socket Services software.  
s socket  
Specifies the PCMCIA socket number to configure. “Socket” must be in the  
range 0 - 15. If this option is omitted, the configuration argument will be applied  
to any available DAQP card inserted into any socket in the system.  
2.4.1.2 Client Driver Installation Examples  
With the Client Driver, the user may specify a list of selections (in the form of command line  
arguments) for the configuration of the DAQP series cards. The Client Driver scans this list  
from left to right until it finds a selection that is currently available in the system. If none of the  
preferred selections are available, the Client Driver requests a configuration from Card and  
Socket Services software.  
Example 1  
DEVICE = C:\DAQPA_CL.SYS  
In example 1, no command line arguments are specified. The Client Driver will configure the  
DAQP card into ANY socket with a base address and IRQ level assigned by Card and Socket  
Services.  
Example 2  
DEVICE = C:\DAQPA_CL.SYS (b300)  
In this example, a single command line argument is provided. The Client Driver will attempt  
to configure a DAQP card inserted into ANY socket with a base address of 300H and an IRQ  
level assigned by Card and Socket Services. If the base address 300H is not available, the  
DAQP card will NOT be configured.  
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Example 3  
DEVICE = C:\DAQPA_CL.SYS (s0,b300,i5)  
Example 3 is also a single command line argument. The client Driver will attempt to configure  
the DAQP card inserted in socket 0 at base address 300H and IRQ level 5. If either address  
300H or IRQ level 5 is unavailable, the card will NOT be configured. In addition, the Client  
Driver will NOT configure any DAQP card inserted into any socket except socket 0.  
Example 4  
DEVICE = C:\DAQPA_CL.SYS (b300,i5) (i10) ( )  
Three command line arguments are provided in this example. The Client Driver will first  
attempt to configure a DAQP card inserted into any socket with a base address 300H and IRQ  
level 5. If either address 300H or IRQ level 5 is unavailable, the Client Driver will proceed to  
the second command line argument and attempt to configure the card with a base address  
assigned by the Card and Socket Services and IRQ level 10. If IRQ level 10 is also unavailable,  
the Client Driver will then go to the third command line argument and attempt to configure it  
with a base address and an IRQ level assigned by Card and Socket Services.  
Example 5  
DEVICE = C:\DAQPA_CL.SYS (b300,i5) ( ) (i10)  
The difference between example 5 and example 4 is the order of the second and third  
command line arguments. The Client Driver will first attempt to configure a DAQP card  
inserted into any socket with a base address 300H and IRQ level 5. If either address 300H or  
IRQ level 5 is unavailable, the Client Driver will proceed to the second command line  
argument and attempt to configure the card with a base address and IRQ level assigned by  
Card and Socket Services. Since the second command line argument includes all available  
address and IRQ resources, the third command line argument will never be reached by the  
Client Driver. The user must ensure command line arguments are placed in a logical order.  
Example 6  
DEVICE = C:\DAQPA_CL.SYS (s0,b300,i5) (s1,b310,i10)  
There are two command line arguments in example 6, which is desirable in systems where  
two or more DAQP cards are to be installed. The Client Driver will attempt to configure the  
DAQP card in socket 0 with base address 300H and IRQ 5. If there is a DAQP card in socket 1,  
it will be configured with base address 310H and IRQ 10. This allows the user to force the card  
address and IRQ settings to be socket specific as required by software or cable connections. If  
the requested resources are not available, the DAQP cards will not be configured.  
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2.4.1.3 Common Problems  
Generic Client Drivers  
Many Card and Socket Services packages include a generic client driver (or SuperClient)  
which configures standard I/O devices. If one of these generic client drivers is installed, it  
may configure the DAQP card and cause the DAQP series Client Driver to fail installation. If  
this is the case, try the following:  
Modify the operation of the generic client driver so that it will not configure the DAQP  
card by placing the DAQP series Client Driver before the generic client driver in the  
CONFIG.SYS file. Consult the Card and Socket Services documentation for availability  
and details of this feature.  
Available Resources  
One function of Card and Socket Services software is to track which system resources  
(memory addresses, I/O addresses, IRQ levels, etc.) are available for assignment to inserted  
PCMCIA cards. Sometimes, however, the Card and Socket Services assumes or incorrectly  
determines that a particular resource is unavailable when it actually is available. Most Card  
and Socket Services generate a resource table, typically in the form of an “.INI” file, which the  
user can modify to adjust the available system resources. Consult the Card and Socket  
Services documentation for the availability and details of this feature.  
Multiple Configuration Attempts  
Some Card and Socket Services have a setting which aborts the configuration process after a  
single configuration failure (such as a configuration request for an unavailable resource). The  
user should change this setting to allow for multiple configuration attempts. Consult the Card  
and Socket Services documentation for the availability and details of this feature.  
Older Versions of Card and Socket Services  
Some versions of Card and Socket Services dated before 1993 do not support general purpose  
I/O cards like the DAQP series PC cards. If after careful installation of the DAQP series Client  
Driver the DAQP card still can not be configured or operated properly, an updated version of  
Card and Socket Services may be required.  
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2.4.2 Enabler for MS-DOS  
For systems that are not operating PCMCIA Card and Socket Services software, the DAQP  
series card includes an Enabler program to enable and configure the DAQP card. This  
Enabler, DAQPA_EN.EXE, will operate in any DOS system using an Intel 82365SL or PCIC  
compatible PCMCIA host adapter.  
In order to use the DAQP series Enabler for DOS, the system must NOT be configured with  
Card and Socket Services software. If Card and Socket Services software is installed, the  
Enabler may interfere with its operation and the devices it controls. Therefore use either the  
DAQP series Client Driver or Enabler exclusively.  
The DAQP series Enabler does not support automatic configuration of PCMCIA cards upon  
insertion, more commonly referred to as “Hot Swapping”. This means the card must be  
installed in one of the system's PCMCIA sockets before executing DAQPA_EN.EXE. If more  
than one adapter is installed in a system, the Enabler must be executed separately for each  
card. Furthermore, DAQPA_EN.EXE should be executed to release the resources used by the  
card before it is removed from the PCMCIA socket. Since PCMCIA cards do not retain their  
configuration after removal, any card removed from the system must be reconfigured with the  
Enabler after being reinserted into it’s PCMCIA socket.  
The Enabler requires a region of high DOS memory when configuring the DAQP card. This  
region is 1000H (4096) bytes long and by default begins at address D0000H (it may be changed  
by the “w” option as described in following sections). If a memory manager such as EMM386,  
QEMM or 386MAX is installed on the system, this region of DOS memory must be excluded  
from the memory manager’s control (normally by using the “x” switch). Consult the  
documentation provided with the memory manager software for instructions on how to  
exclude this memory region. Follow the procedures listed here to install the DAQP Enabler:  
1. Copy the file DAQPA_EN.EXE located in the PCMCIA\DOS\Enablers directory of the  
DaqSuite CD onto the root directory of the system hard drive.  
2. Using an ASCII text editor, open the system's CONFIG.SYS file located in the root  
directory of the boot drive.  
3. Add the following line to the CONFIG.SYS file:  
DEVICE = drive:\DAQPA_EN.EXE (options)  
where (options) are the DAQP series Enabler command line options discussed on the  
following pages. Save the CONFIG.SYS file and exit the text editor.  
4. Insert the DAQP card into one of the system PCMCIA slots. NOTE: Since the DAQP  
series Enabler does not support "Hot Swapping", it is necessary to have the DAQP card  
installed when booting the system.  
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6. Reboot the system and note the message displayed when the Enabler is loaded. If the  
Enabler reports the desired card configuration, the installation process is complete.  
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2.4.2.1 Enabler Command Line Options  
To configure a DAQP series card, the Enabler requires one command line argument from the  
user to determine the configuration. This argument must be enclosed in parenthesis. Within  
the argument, a comma (no space) must be used to separate the parameters from each other if  
there are two or more parameters. The following parameters may be specified in the  
command line argument:  
s socket  
Specifies the PCMCIA socket number to configure. Socket” must be in the  
range 0 - 15. This option is always required.  
b address Specifies the base I/O address of the DAQP card in hexadecimal. Address”  
must reside on an even 8-byte boundary (“address” must end in 0 or 8). This  
option is required if the “r” option is not used.  
i
irq  
Specifies the interrupt level (IRQ) of the DAQP card in hexadecimal. “Irq” must  
be one of the following values: 3, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 15, or 0 if no IRQ is  
desired. This option is required if the “r” option is not used.  
w address Specifies the base address of the memory window required to configure the  
DAQP card. Set “address”= D0 for a memory window at D0000, D8 for a  
memory window at D8000, etc. Valid settings for address are C8, CC, D0, D4,  
D8, and DC. If omitted, “address” = D0 is assumed.  
r
Instructs the Enabler to release the resources previously allocated to the DAQP  
card. When this option is used, B address and I irq options will be ignored.  
Therefore, do NOT use this option when initially configuring the DAQP card.  
2.4.2.2 Enabler Examples  
Example 1  
DEVICE = C:\DAQPA_EN.EXE  
No command line argument is specified. The Enabler will report an error and display the  
proper usage of the Enabler.  
Example 2  
DEVICE = C:\DAQPA_EN.EXE (s0,b300,i5)  
In this example, the Enabler will configure the DAQP card in socket 0 with a base address  
300H and IRQ level 5 using a configuration memory window at D0000H.  
Example 3  
DEVICE = C:\DAQPA_EN.EXE (i10,b310,s1)  
In example 3, the Enabler will configure the DAQP card in socket 1 with a base address at  
310H and IRQ level 10 using a configuration memory window at D0000H. Note the parameter  
order is not significant.  
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Example 4  
DEVICE = C:\DAQPA_EN.EXE (s0,b300,i5,wCC)  
Here the Enabler will configure the DAQP card in socket 0 with a base address at 300H and  
IRQ level 5 using a configuration memory window at CC000H.  
Example 5  
DEVICE = C:\DAQPA_EN.EXE (s0,r)  
DEVICE = C:\DAQPA_EN.EXE (s0,r,b300,i5)  
These two command line arguments are equivalent because of the “r” option. The Enabler  
will release the configuration used by the DAQP card in socket 0 using a configuration  
memory window at D0000H.  
Example 6  
DEVICE = C:\DAQPA_EN.EXE (s0,r,wC8)  
Here the Enabler will release the configuration used by the DAQP card in socket 1, using a  
configuration memory window at C8000H.  
2.4.2.3 Common Problems  
Memory Range Exclusion  
The Enabler requires a region of high DOS memory when configuring a DAQP card. This  
region is 1000H (4096) bytes long and by default begins at address D0000H (this default  
address can be changed by using the “w” option).  
If a memory manager such as EMM386, QEMM or 386MAX is installed on the system, this  
region of DOS memory must be excluded from the memory manager’s control (normally by  
using the “x” switch). Consult the documentation provided with the memory manager  
software for instructions on how to exclude this memory region.  
Furthermore, some systems use the high memory area for ROM shadowing to improve  
overall system performance. For the Enabler to properly operate, any ROM shadowing must  
be disabled in the address range specified for the configuration window. This can usually be  
completed by using the system’s CMOS setup utility.  
Socket Numbers  
The Enabler requires that the socket number be specified for the DAQP card to be configured.  
The DAQP card must be inserted into the socket before executing the Enabler.  
For the DAQP series Enabler, the lowest socket number is always designated as socket 0 and  
the highest socket number as N-1, (assuming there are N sockets available). Some vendors  
number their sockets from 1 to N. In that case, the vendor socket number minus 1 should be  
used in the “s” option for the DAQP series Enabler.  
Card and Socket Services Software  
In order to use DAQP series Enabler for DOS, the system must NOT be configured with Card  
and Socket Services software. If Card and Socket Services software is installed, the Enabler  
may interfere with its operation and the devices it controls.  
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3. Field Wiring  
The DAQP card is fitted in with a 32-pin 0.8 mm shielded connector. See Figure 3-1 for pin  
assignments.  
33  
Reserved  
Ch 0  
Ch 0 (-) / Ch 4  
30  
Ch 1  
Ch 1 (-) / Ch 5  
Ch 2  
Ch 2 (-) / Ch 6  
Ch 3  
Ch 3 (-) / Ch 7  
25  
GND  
DA0  
DA1  
+5V  
20  
GND  
ExtClock  
ExtGate  
ExtOut  
GND  
15  
FullPower  
SSH (Synch. Sample Hold)  
DI 0 / External Trigger  
DI 1 / GS 0 (Ext. Gain Sel.  
DI 2 / External Clock  
10  
DI 3 / GS 1 (Ext. Gain Sel.  
DO 0 / CS0 (Ext. Chn. Sel. 0)  
DO 1 / CS1 (Ext. Chn. Sel. 1)  
DO 2 / CS2 (Ext. Chn. Sel. 2)  
DO 3 / CS3 (Ext. Chn. Sel. 3)  
5
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
1
Reserved  
Figure 3-1. DAQP Series Card Output Connector  
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3.1 CP-DAQPA Cable Assembly  
The cable assembly included with your DAQP card, part number CP-DAQPA, converts the  
card’s 32 pin I/O connector to a standard D37 connector. Figure 3-2 illustrates the D37  
connector pin assignments for the CP-DAQPA and the optional screw terminal block UIO-37.  
GND  
Ch0- / Ch4  
Ch1- / Ch5  
Ch2- / Ch6  
Ch3- / Ch7  
N/C  
19  
18  
17  
16  
15  
14  
37  
36  
35  
34  
33  
32  
31  
30  
29  
28  
27  
26  
Ch0+ / Ch0  
Ch1+ / Ch1  
Ch2+ / Ch2  
Ch3+ / Ch3  
Ch4+ / Ch4  
Ch5+ / Ch5  
Ch6+ / Ch6  
Ch7+ / Ch7  
GND  
N/C 13  
N/C  
N/C  
12  
11  
10  
9
FullPower  
D/A Ch0  
ExtGate  
GND  
GND  
D/A Ch1  
8
SSH  
7
25 DI0 / Ext. Trigger  
DI1 / GS0  
DI3 / GS1  
DO1 / CS1  
DO3 / CS3  
N/C  
6
24  
23  
22  
21  
20  
DI2 / ExtClk  
DO0 / CS0  
DO2 / CS2  
N/C  
5
4
3
2
ExtOut  
N/C  
1
Figure 3-2. CP-DAQPA/UIO-37 D37 Pin Diagram  
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Table 3-1 lists cable mapping for the CP-DAQPA Hirose-32 to D37 connectors.  
Table 3-1. DAQP Series Card Cable Mapping  
Hirose32  
32  
31  
30  
29  
28  
27  
26  
25  
24  
23  
22  
21  
20  
19  
18  
17  
16  
15  
14  
13  
12  
11  
10  
9
D37  
Name  
Channel 0  
Description  
37  
Channel 0  
A/D input, differential / single-ended  
A/D input, differential / single-ended  
A/D input, differential / single-ended  
A/D input, differential / single-ended  
A/D input, differential / single-ended  
A/D input, differential / single-ended  
A/D input, differential / single-ended  
A/D input, differential / single-ended  
Signal ground (analog input)  
18,33 Channel 0 (-) Channel 4  
36 Channel 1 Channel 1  
17,32 Channel 1 (-) Channel 5  
35 Channel 2 Channel 2  
16,31 Channel 2 (-) Channel 6  
34 Channel 3 Channel 3  
15,30 Channel 3 (-) Channel 7  
19  
9
GND  
DA0  
D/A channel 0 output  
27  
1
DA1  
D/A channel 1 output  
+5V  
Power supply output  
7
GND  
Power supply ground return  
24  
8
ExtClk (shared with A/D)  
ExtGate  
Timer/Counter external clock input  
Timer/Counter external gate control  
Timer/Counter overflow pulse output  
Power supply ground return  
11  
7
ExtOut  
GND  
10  
26  
25  
6
FullPower (org. D/A 0 ref. in)  
SSH (org. D/A 1 ref. in)  
Digital in bit 0 (shared)  
Digital in bit 1 (normal mode)  
Digital in bit 2 (shared)  
Digital in bit 3 (normal mode)  
1/0 : Full power / Power down  
Synchronous Sample Hold  
External trigger (same as in DAS-16)  
External gain, LSB (expansion mode)  
External clock (org. DAS-16 Ctr 0 Gate)  
External gain, MSB (expansion mode)  
24  
5
23  
4
Digital out bit 0 (normal mode) External channel bit 0 (expansion mode)  
Digital out bit 1 (normal mode) External channel bit 1 (expansion mode)  
Digital out bit 2 (normal mode) External channel bit 2 (expansion mode)  
Digital out bit 3 (normal mode) External channel bit 3 (expansion mode)  
8
7
22  
3
6
5
28  
28  
29  
29  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
Signal ground (D/A output)  
Signal ground (D/A output)  
Signal ground (digital)  
4
3
2
Signal ground (digital)  
1
N/C Reserved  
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3.2 UIO-37 Screw Terminal Block  
For applications requiring discrete wiring connections, the UIO-37 terminal block shown in  
Figure 3-3 provides a simple way of connecting signals to the DAQP card. The D37 connector  
is available in either male or female and has two rows of screw terminals. The first row is  
numbered from pin 1 to pin 19 and the second row from pin 20 to pin 37. Wire gage 16  
through 28 is recommended for screw terminal connections. Figure 3-4 illustrates the DAQP  
card with accessories.  
D37 Connector (Male or Female available)  
Figure 3-3. UIO-37 Terminal Block  
DAQP Series Card  
D37  
UIO-37  
Hirose 32  
CP-DAQP  
Figure 3-4. DAQP Card with Accessories  
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4. Theory of Operation  
The DAQP card consists of 4 differential or 8 single-ended analog input channels each with a  
bipolar input range of ±10v, ±5v, ±2.5v or ±1.25v (programmable gain of 1, 2, 4 or 8). The A/D  
converter, either 12 -bit or 16-bit, can be operated at a top speed of 100,000 samples per second  
(10 µs per sample). The A/D converter uses left-justified 2's complement coding. For the 16-bit  
version, the output ranges from -32768 to 32767. The 12-bit version is structured so that it’s  
contents occupy the most significant 12 bits, padding the least significant 4 bits with all zeros  
to make a 16-bit output word for each converted input sample.  
The DAQP card can be operated as an I/O device, occupying 16 consecutive bytes in the I/O  
address space. It can also be configured to operate via memory mapped I/O. The DAQP fully  
complies with PCMCIA standard 2.10 as a type II card. The card has no jumpers or DIP  
switches. All of the configurable features are software programmable.  
Functionally, the DAQP card consists of the following components: the DC/DC power  
supply, analog input multiplexer, programmable gain control amplifier, A/D converter, data  
FIFO, scan list FIFO, trigger control circuit, pacer clock, interrupt/status registers, digital I/O  
register, D/A circuit and associated control circuits.  
4.1 DC/DC Power Supply  
The DAQP card uses a standard +5 volt digital input power supply from the PCMCIA  
connector which the DC/DC power supply converts to the ±15v for the analog front end and  
the +5v power supply for the A/D converter. The DC/DC converter uses 140 mA, 67% of the  
210 mA total load current, from the digital input power supply to generate the necessary  
voltages.  
According to the PCMCIA standard, any card that draws more than 100 mA must not be  
automatically turned on upon insertion until it is intentionally accessed by writing to the card  
configuration and option register (or its allocated I/O space). The DAQP card supports this  
specification by providing a unique power down mode control. When the card is first  
powered up or after a reset, the DC/DC converter is turned off, so that only the digital portion  
of the DAQP card is up and running. This requires only 40 mA from the digital input +5 volt  
power supply. The user has the option of reading the card information memory, where the  
maximum power consumption is listed for reference, and then decide whether or not to “wake  
up” the card. If required, the card can be set to full power mode immediately when it’s  
PCMCIA configuration and option register (COR) is written by the software.  
After the card is set to full power mode for the first time by writing the PCMCIA configuration  
and option register, it can then be set for power down mode by writing a ‘1’ into bit 2, the  
power down bit, of the PCMCIA auxiliary control register.  
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4.2 Analog Input Multiplexer  
Differential or single-ended configuration is determined by bit 6 of the high byte in the scan  
list register. ‘1’ selects differential input, while a ‘0’ selects single-ended input. Expansion  
cards will only support single-ended channels. It is strongly recommended that single-ended  
or differential selection be uniform for all internal channels (e.g., all 4 channels as differential  
or all 8 channels as single-ended). Although it is possible to have some channels configured as  
single-ended and others as differential, this may cause confusion and unexpected signal  
errors.  
With differential configuration, there are 4 channels. However, if the user specifies channels 4  
to 7 in a differential configuration, it will short the inputs to ground for system offset  
measurement. The readings taken under such a circumstance can be used for offset correction.  
The input multiplexers have built-in protection against over-voltage when the board is at full  
power and when it is powered down. The protection mechanism will isolate the input from  
the rest of the board, as long as the input voltage is within the protection range of ±30 volts.  
4.3 Programmable Gain Control Amplifier  
DAQP series cards have an internal gain of 1, 2, 4 or 8. For the high gain option: DAQP-208 the  
internal gain choices are 1, 10, 100 and 1000. The gain can be changed “on the fly” when  
scanning from channel to channel by changing the configuration of the programmable gain  
instrumentation amplifiers. The internal gain selection is specified by the scan list entry, (bits  
4 and 5 of the high byte). The contents of these two bits will determine the gain of the analog  
front end.  
The settling time of the analog front end meets speed requirements, however, if the amplifier  
is saturated it may need more time to recover. This can cause distortion at the input signal to  
the A/D converter. It is recommended that amplifier saturation be avoided by using a low  
gain setting and attenuating the input signal whenever possible.  
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4.4 Scan List Register  
One entry to the scan list register contains a 16-bit word or two 8-bit bytes. It specifies the  
internal channel and gain selection in the high byte or MSB, and the external channel and gain  
selection in the low byte or LSB, in addition to other control and configuration settings. The  
external selections are used for expansion card channels (up to 128), while the internal  
selections are for channels on board the DAQP card. Expansion cards are not included as part  
of the DAQP series data acquisition system, however, they can be purchased separately from  
your vendor.  
The number of entries in the scan list ranges from 1 to 2048. There are no dependencies  
implied among the entries of the scan list. The user may choose any valid gain combination  
for any channel, internal or external. Channels can be scanned in any order required, repeated  
or not, with the same or different gain for each entry.  
The scan list must be flushed before programming to guarantee the integrity of each entry.  
There must be an even number of bytes programmed into the scan list, with the low byte  
sitting at an even offset followed by the high byte, otherwise the channel scan result will be  
unpredictable.  
It is strongly recommended that the differential/single-ended control bit (bit 14, MSB) be  
programmed the same for all the entries in the scan list. Single-ended configuration should be  
selected if there are expansion cards connected to the DAQP card. The synchronous sample  
hold bit (bit 6, LSB) is reserved for expansion cards.  
The first channel flag (bit 7, LSB) has to be set for the first (and ONLY the first) entry of the  
scan list. The DAQP card hardware relies on this bit to tell the end (or the start) of the scan. In  
normal operations, the DAQP card starts one scan when triggered, (software or TTL trigger in  
one-shot mode or sampling pulse triggers from the pacer clock in continuous mode). During  
the scan, each entry in the scan list will be processed until it finds the entry that has the first  
channel flag set to ‘1’. The hardware then stops scanning and waits for the next trigger. The  
scan will continue indefinitely if none of the list entries has the flag set to ‘1’. On the other  
hand, if more than one entry has the flag set to ‘1’, the scan list will then be chopped into  
pieces. Each piece will require a trigger to be scanned. Should the flag be set to ‘1’ on an entry  
other than the first, a “starting offset” will be introduced to the scan list. Channel scanning will  
start from the entry with the flag set to ‘1’, run through the list, turn around and end at the one  
before it. Although this may be useful for diagnosis or special applications, it is the abnormal  
way of setting the first channel flag and should be avoided unless absolutely necessary.  
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4.5 Trigger Circuit  
The DAQP card can be triggered by software, an external TTL signal, the analog input passing  
through the preset threshold or the pacer clock. For the TTL or analog trigger, an active  
trigger edge can be selected for either the low-to-high or high-to-low transition.  
In one-shot trigger mode, one trigger (either internal or external), will start one and only one  
scan of all channels specified in the scan list. (The pacer clock has no effect in this mode  
although it is good practice to program the pacer clock with a divisor greater than 2).  
Multiple scans can be initiated by issuing multiple triggers.  
In continuous trigger mode (without pre-trigger), the software, TTL or analog trigger initiates  
a series of scans. The first scan begins immediately on receiving a trigger, while the rest are  
carried out each time the pacer clock fires. The process will continue until an A/D stop  
command is received.  
If the internal trigger (or the software trigger) is selected, the trig/arm command will serve as  
a trigger when received by the DAQP card. For the external trigger sources (TTL or analog),  
the same command will be taken as an arm command, which arms the DAQP card so that the  
first proper trigger edge following the arm command will serve as the trigger. Unexpected  
edge transitions during the trigger source configuration are totally ignored if the DAQP card  
is not armed. The pre-trigger option can be selected in continuous mode (not in one-shot  
mode) with external trigger sources (not with an internal trigger). If the option is selected, the  
arm command starts the pacer clock so the input channels specified in the scan list will be  
scanned each time the pacer clock fires. The results will then be stored in the data FIFO. Once  
the data FIFO almost full threshold is reached, (it should be programmed as an integer  
multiple of the scan list length), the least recent scan is automatically discarded and the most  
recent scan is placed into the data FIFO. This cycle will continue until the external trigger  
(TTL or analog) is received. From then on, no more scans are discarded and the normal data  
acquisition process starts with FIFO half full of data samples. In fact, the A/D event bits (bits 3  
and 4 in the status register at base + 2) will not be set until the trigger is received. This  
guarantees that no interrupts will be sent before the trigger is received.  
The trigger position in the received data can be determined by subtracting the offset of the  
programmed data FIFO threshold. The position resolution will be within one pacer clock  
cycle. However, the trigger position cannot be determined if the trigger comes before the data  
FIFO is filled to it’s programmed threshold. The data lost bit in the status register will be set  
to indicate this error.  
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4.6 A/D Converter and Data FIFO  
The DAQP card always assumes a bipolar input range of ±10V if the gain is one. The output  
data format will always be in 2's complement (and left justified for 12-bit versions). The data  
acquisition time of the A/D converter is 2 µs while it’s conversion time is no more than 8 µs.  
The output of the A/D converter is fed into a data FIFO providing data buffering of up to 512  
samples (2048 with 2K option installed).  
The A/D converter, once triggered, will complete conversion for every analog input channel  
specified in the scan list at the specified scan speed and then feed the results into the data  
FIFO. In between scans, the DAQP card waits until another trigger is received (one-shot mode)  
or the pacer clock fires (continuous mode).  
The data FIFO has two programmable thresholds, one for almost full and the other for almost  
empty. The DAQP card uses the almost full threshold and ignores the other one.  
The data FIFO should always be flushed prior to using the arm/trig command to start data  
acquisition. When the FIFO is flushed or emptied by the host reading its content, the FIFO  
empty flag will be set. As long as there are samples left in the data FIFO, the empty flag will  
be cleared.  
When the number of data samples in the FIFO becomes greater than the programmed almost  
full threshold, the almost full flag is set. When the number becomes less than or equal to the  
specified almost full threshold, the flag will be cleared. On power up or reset, the threshold is  
defaulted at 7 bytes to full (3.5 samples). Correct setting of the threshold will help achieve  
optimal performance of the card.  
When the FIFO is full, the full flag will be set, and no more samples can be written into the  
FIFO. At the end of each scan, the DAQP card will set the data lost flag if the data FIFO is  
already full. This flag will not be set before or during the scan, but at the end of it. Once the  
data lost flag is set, it will not be cleared until the status register is read.  
The data lost bit in the status register (base + 2) will be set when data continues to enter the  
A/D data FIFO while it is already full. With the pre-trigger option, the data lost bit is also set  
when an external trigger is received before the programmed data FIFO threshold is reached.  
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4.7 Interrupt and Status  
The DAQP card has three interrupt sources, the end-of-scan (EOS) interrupt, the FIFO  
threshold interrupt and the timer interrupt. The control register (base + 2, write only) has two  
bits to enable or disable the EOS and FIFO interrupts independently. However, it is strongly  
recommended that the two interrupts be used exclusively. Bit 5 of the auxiliary control  
register (base + 15, write only) enables or disables the timer interrupt.  
When the EOS interrupt is enabled, an interrupt is sent to the host at the end of each scan of  
the channel list. If there is only one channel in the scan list, the EOS interrupt is reduced to an  
EOC (end-of-conversion) interrupt.  
The FIFO threshold interrupt, when enabled, is sent to the host when the almost full flag is set.  
The host can then use the “string input” instruction to move a block of samples from the FIFO.  
The EOS and FIFO threshold event bits in the status register (base + 2, read only) and will be  
set whenever the corresponding event happens. These bits can be used for indicating the  
source of the interrupt. Once set, the event bits will not be cleared until the host reads the  
status register.  
When the timer interrupt is enabled, an interrupt is sent to the host whenever the timer  
overflows. The corresponding event bit is in the auxiliary status register (bit 4 at base +15,  
read only). Reading the register will not clear this event. It can only be cleared by writing a “0”  
to bit 5 of the auxiliary control register which disables the timer interrupt.  
4.8 Digital I/O  
The DAQP card has one digital input port (base + 3, read only) of four bits (bits 0-3), and one  
digital output port (base + 3, write only) of four bits (bits 0-3). The output port is latched, but  
the input port is not.  
Four input lines are connected to the digital input port, each representing one bit in the port.  
When reading the digital input port, the CURRENT status of the digital input lines are  
returned to the host.  
All four input lines are shared with other functions. Bit 0 is shared as the external trigger  
input, while bit 2 is shared as the external clock input. Bits 1 and 3 are taken over as the  
external gain selection lines if there is an expansion card(s) connected and the expansion bit in  
the control register is set to ‘1’. In this case, the digital output lines are driven by the external  
channel selection bits of the current scan list entry. Otherwise, they will be connected to the  
latched bits 0-3 of the digital output port. The current status of the digital input lines will  
always be returned when the host reads the digital input port regardless of whether the lines  
are shared or not.  
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4.9 A/D State Machine  
The DAQP card has an internal state machine that controls A/D operation, (see Figure 4-1).  
The state machine defaults to S0 after power up or reset. The normal state flow would be first  
S0 to S3, initiated by a scan list (queue) flush command (RSTQ). Then the queue must be  
programmed by writing into the queue (base + 1). With the queue being programmed, the  
next step is moving the state machine from S3 back to S0. This is done by issuing a flush data  
FIFO command (RSTF), which sets up the gain and channel selections for the first channel in  
the scan list and then waits for a trigger to start the scan. When the trigger (ADCLK) comes, the  
state machine moves from S0 to S1 and then A/D conversion is started. The state machine will  
wait at S2 until the conversion is completed. It then moves to S4, where the A/D conversion  
result is written into the data FIFO. The scan rate is determined by the time the state machine  
moves from S1 to S4, which can be programmed as either 10, 20 or 40 ms. If there are more  
channels left in the scan list, the state machine will skip to S1 for another conversion loop.  
Otherwise it will return to S0, waiting for another trigger (or a sampling pulse from the pacer  
clock if in continuous trigger mode). Any time during data acquisition, an A/D stop  
command will stop the data acquisition by moving the state machine back to S0.  
ADCLK (trigger)  
Wait (A/D conversion)  
S0  
S2  
S1  
< RSTQ  
scan  
<
Channels  
remaining  
>
RSTF  
data  
list flush  
FIFO  
flush  
S4  
S3  
< Scan list completed  
Figure 4-1. Transition Diagram of A/D Conversion Process  
It is important that the sequence of S0-S3-S0 be followed as described above. The user must  
issue two commands to the DAQP card: the flush scan list command (RSTQ) and the flush  
data FIFO command (RSTF). This guarantees that the scan list and the data FIFO are flushed  
properly for the expected data acquisition. Once the flush data FIFO command is issued, the  
DAQP card will prepare the first channel in the scan list and then return to state S0 waiting for  
the first trigger. Anytime the data FIFO is flushed, the default threshold setting will be  
restored (7 bytes to full) by the hardware. The data FIFO threshold should always be  
programmed after flushing if the required threshold is different from the default threshold.  
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4.10 D/A Circuit  
The DAQP series PC card is equipped with two D/A channels. The 12-bit D/A converter is a  
serial converter supporting synchronous update and is configured for a bipolar output range  
from -5V to +5V. The 12-bit output data format is always in 2’s complement (right justified),  
with the upper 4 bits indicating the output channel number (binary ‘0000’ for channel 0 and  
‘0001’ for channel 1).  
The D/A data port occupies two bytes (write only) in the I/O space, base + 8 being the low  
byte and base + 9 the high byte. It is recommended that the data port be accessed with a single  
16 bit I/O write instruction. If an 8 bit I/O instruction is used, the low byte should be written  
first, followed by the high byte.  
The serial link from the D/A port to the D/A converter contains a 16 bit buffer register and a  
16 bit shift register. A data word written into the D/A port is first written into the buffer  
register, then is loaded to the shift register and finally sent to the input register of the  
corresponding D/A channel. Bit 5 of the auxiliary status register (base + 15, read) indicates  
whether the D/A port buffer register is occupied (‘1’) or empty (‘0’). It is recommended that  
the D/A port be accessed only when this bit is “0” to prevent possible data loss or corruption.  
Inside the D/A converter, each channel has a 16 bit shift register, plus a 12 bit input and a 12  
bit output register. The data loaded to the output register determines the analog output of the  
D/A channel.  
The DAQP series PC card has 4 D/A operation modes (mode 0 to 3). Mode 0 is the direct  
update mode. The corresponding D/A channel output register will be updated immediately  
after the data word is written into the D/A port (if byte I/O is used, after the high byte is  
written). There is no synchronization between the two channels in this mode.  
Modes 1, 2 and 3 all use synchronized update in which the two D/A channels are updated  
synchronously upon certain event. In mode 1, the event is the independent timer/counter  
overflow. In mode 2, the event is external gate control moving from low to high. In mode 3,  
the event is the pacer clock. In synchronous update modes, the data word written to each D/A  
channel will be buffered in it’s input register first and then gets loaded into the output register  
when the corresponding event (depending on the mode) is received. Synchronous update  
modes can be used to generate waveforms with accurate phase requirements, such as  
orthogonal sinusoidal waveforms (sine and cosine).  
4.11Timer/Counter  
In addition to the 24 bit pacer clock, the DAQP series card is equipped with an independent  
16 bit timer/counter. It has an internal clock source of 1 MHz and an external clock input that  
is shared with the pacer clock external input. The timer circuit contains a 16 bit reload register,  
a 16 bit up-counter and a 16 bit read-latch register. The reload register holds the initial value  
for the counter. The initial value is also set each time it overflows. The read-latch register will  
latch the current count of the counter each time it receives the latch command (writing ‘1’ into  
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bit 3 of the command register at base + 7). The integrity of the latched count is guaranteed by  
the logic design.  
The timer port is allocated at base + 10 (low byte) and base + 11 (high byte). The 16 bit reload  
register is accessed when writing to the port, while the read-latch register is accessed when  
reading the port. The up-counter cannot be accessed directly.  
Bit 4 of the auxiliary control register selects the timer clock source. The 1 MHz internal clock  
source will be selected if the bit is set to “0”. The external clock source (or the counter pulse  
input) is selected if the bit is set to “1”. Because of the I/O pin confinement, the timer external  
clock input is shared with the pacer clock external input (also shared as digital input bit 2).  
Bits 3 and 2 in the auxiliary control register (base + 15) control the timer operation. There are  
four modes (modes 0, 1, 2 and 3 corresponding to 00, 01, 10 and 11 respectively). In mode 0,  
the counter will stop and reload the initial value when it detects the rising edge of the selected  
clock source. In mode 1, the counter will pause counting, but not reload as it does in mode 0.  
Mode 2 is the counting mode in which the counter will count up each time it detects the rising  
edge of the selected clock source. In mode 3, the counter will be controlled by the external  
gate signal. Counting proceeds when the gate signal is high and pauses when it is low.  
Three I/O pins are associated with the timer: the external clock source input (shared with the  
pacer clock), external gate control (shared with the D/A) and the timer overflow pulse output  
(TTL) which goes high when the timer reaches its final count (hexadecimal FFFF).  
The reload register can be set up for both counting and timing operations. The value written  
into the reload register, referred to as X for the sake of discussion, determines the divisor or  
modulus for timing and counting. Since the final count before reloading is always 65535  
(hexadecimal FFFF) for the up-counter, the reload (initial) value determines where the  
counting will start. Therefore, 65536 - X will be the divisor for timing operations or the  
modulus for counting operations. For example, a divide-by-2 timer (or modulus 2 counter)  
can be configured by setting X equal to 65534, while X = 0 implies the divisor is 65536 (or the  
modulus is 65536). It is recommended that X = 65535 (hexadecimal FFFF) be avoided because  
the timer will stick at this final count even though the hardware will not reject or indicate  
such a setting. Changing the reload register “on the fly” is allowed, but the setting will not  
take effect until the up-counter reaches its final count (65535 or hexadecimal FFFF). The next  
clock rising edge will load the counter with the new setting.  
Bit 5 in the auxiliary control register (base + 15) enables (when set to 1) or disables (when set  
to 0) the timer interrupt. When enabled, an interrupt will be sent each time the up-counter  
overflows (passes through its final count). Whether the timer interrupt is enabled or not,  
setting bit 4 in the auxiliary status register to “1” indicates the overflow event has been  
detected at least once since the last time the bit was cleared by writing a “1” into bit 5 of the  
auxiliary control register. Reading the auxiliary status register will not clear this bit.  
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5. I/O Registers  
5.1 PCMCIA Interface  
The information in this section is provided for those who need low level PCMCIA interface  
details for the DAQP card. The client driver or enabler that comes with the DAQP card will be  
sufficient for most applications.  
The DAQP card performs data acquisition for all host computers equipped with a version 2.10  
compliant PCMCIA interface. The DAQP card has a form factor of type II (5 mm thick). The  
card is highly flexible with respect to addressing and interrupt level use. It can be configured  
either as a memory only interface or as an I/O interface and can be powered up or down with  
the help of PCMCIA card and socket services. The DAQP card provides a single interrupt that  
can be routed to any system interrupt via the PCMCIA socket controller.  
There are two sets of registers on the DAQP card: the program registers and the configuration  
registers.  
Program registers fall under program control and belong to the DAQP card. The I/O location  
of these registers is controlled by the PCMCIA socket configuration and by the contents of the  
PCMCIA configuration registers.  
The configuration registers are as those defined in the PCMCIA 2.10 specification and are  
located in the DAQP card’s configuration space at offset 8000H. The configuration space also  
contains the Card Information Structure (CIS) which is located at offset 0000H. The CIS  
memory contains information about the DAQP card as defined by the PCMCIA 2.10  
specification. It is recommended that configuration and power up/down control of the DAQP  
card be carried out through the standard card and socket services although an enabler can be  
used to complete these tasks.  
Two PCMCIA configuration registers are supported by the DAQP card, (see Table 5-1): the  
Configuration Option Register and the Card Configuration and Status Register.  
Table 5-1. PCMCIA Configuration Registers  
Offset Access  
0x8000 R/W  
0x8002 R/W  
Description  
Configuration Option Register  
Card Configuration and Status Register  
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5.1.1 Configuration and Option Register (COR)  
Bits 7 and 6 of the Configuration Option Register are defined by the PCMCIA standard as the  
SRESET and the LevlREQ Bits. A “1” written into the SRESET bit puts the card in reset state,  
while a “0” moves it out of reset state. In reset state, it behaves as if a hardware reset is  
received from the host. The LevlREQ bit controls the type of interrupt signal generated by the  
DAQP card. Setting the Configuration Index bits to “0” makes the DAQP card a memory only  
card (accessed only by memory read/write operations), while setting it to “1” enables the card  
for standard I/O. Table 5-2 lists the COR bit definition.  
Table 5-2. COR Bit Definition  
Bit Name  
Description  
7
SRESET  
1 = Put the card into reset state  
0 = Get out of reset state  
6
LevlReq  
1 = Level mode interrupt  
0 = Edge mode interrupt  
5-0 Index Bits 000000 = Memory mode  
000001 = I/O mode  
5.1.2 Card Configuration and Status Register (CCSR)  
The DAQP card uses two bits in this register. When bit 1 is set to “1”, it indicates a pending  
interrupt. The bit will remain as “1” until the interrupt source is cleared. Bit 2 is used for  
power down control. Setting a “1” at this bit will put the card into power down mode, while a  
“0” brings it back to full power mode. The remaining bits are not used. Table 5-3 lists the  
CCSR bit definition.  
Table 5-3. CCSR Bit Definition  
Bit  
Name  
Description  
7--3 Not Used Reserved, all ‘0’ when writing and reading  
2
1
0
PwrDwn 1 = Power down mode  
0 = Full powered mode  
Intr  
1 = Interrupt pending  
0 = No interrupt pending  
Reserved Reserved as ‘0’  
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5.2 Address Map  
The DAQP card uses eight consecutive I/O locations within the system I/O address space.  
The base address of the adapter is determined during hardware configuration. The eight I/O  
locations are used by the DAQP card as summarized in the following table.  
Table 5-4. DAQP Series Card Address Map  
Address  
Lines  
I/O Address  
Port Access  
Register Description  
(A3A2A1A0)  
0000  
0001  
0010  
base + 0  
base + 1  
base + 2  
Read/Write  
Write Only  
Data FIFO  
Scan List (Queue)  
Write  
Read  
Control Register  
Status Register  
0011  
base + 3  
Write  
Read  
Digital Output Register  
Digital Input Register  
0100  
base + 4  
Write Only  
Write Only  
Write Only  
Write Only  
Write Only  
Pacer Clock, low byte  
Pacer Clock, middle byte  
Pacer Clock, high byte  
Command Register  
D/A port  
0101  
base + 5  
0110  
base + 6  
0111  
base + 7  
1000 - 1001  
1010 - 1011  
base + 8, 9  
base + 10, 11  
Write  
Read  
Timer port (re-load)  
Timer port (read latch)  
1100 - 1110  
1111  
base + 12, 13, 14  
base + 15  
reserved  
Write  
Read  
Auxiliary Control Register  
Auxiliary Status Register  
The D/A and timer port can be accessed as 16 bit I/O registers and with 8 bit I/O instructions.  
The remaining registers are 8 bits. Each is discussed in detail in the following sections.  
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5.2.1 Data FIFO Register (base + 0)  
The data FIFO register is considered as the access port to the data FIFO, which holds up to  
2048 data words from the A/D conversion results. The port is also used for programming the  
data FIFO thresholds, as explained later in this section.  
Note: Although the data FIFO register is 8 bits wide, it is strongly recommended that the  
register be accessed as a 16 bit word to guarantee integrity. The low byte (LSB or the least  
significant byte) should always be accessed first, followed by the high byte (MSB or the most  
significant byte). Two consecutive bytes should be read from or written into the port each  
time it is accessed. The following table illustrates bit allocation.  
Table 5-5. Data FIFO Register Bit Allocation  
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0  
LSB  
D7  
D6  
D5  
D4  
D3  
D2  
D1  
D9  
D0  
D8  
MSB  
D15  
D14  
D13  
D12  
D11  
D10  
5.2.1.1 Data FIFO Operation Modes  
Depending on the mode of operation, the 16-bit word read from or written into the register has  
different meanings as shown in the following table.  
Table 5-6. Data FIFO Operation Mode  
Mod Selection Bit A/D Acces  
Operation  
e
s
0
0, threshold  
1, data FIFO  
0, threshold  
1, data FIFO  
Idle  
Idle  
Run  
Run  
Read  
Write  
Verify data FIFO threshold  
Program data FIFO threshold  
1
2
3
Read  
Write  
Read data FIFO  
Write data FIFO (diagnosis)  
Read  
Write  
Verify data FIFO threshold  
Not allowed  
Read  
Write  
Read data FIFO  
Not allowed  
The “selection bit” is also called the “program/access” control bit, as defined in the auxiliary  
control register (base + 7). Mode 0 is the FIFO program mode, under which the two  
consecutive words (four bytes) written into the register address will set the almost full and  
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almost empty thresholds (in bytes). The first word specifies the almost empty threshold, (not  
used, can be set to anything), while the second word determines the almost full threshold.  
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The threshold should be set to a value from 1 to FIFO size minus 1. (Default is set to 7 at reset  
or power up). Refer to Table 5-7 for FIFO threshold settings.  
Table 5-7. Data FIFO Threshold Setting  
Threshold  
Defaul  
t
Threshold Range  
Suggested Value  
Almost Empty  
Almost Full  
7
7
Irrelevant  
1...4095  
Irrelevant  
2048  
Mode 1 is FIFO test mode, in which data bytes will be written into the data FIFO and read  
back from it. The FIFO flags (empty, almost full, and full) will change according to the data  
bytes available in the data FIFO and the configured threshold.  
Mode 2 should be avoided. Data bytes cannot be written into the FIFO under this mode.  
Bytes read from the FIFO will be the same as in mode 0.  
Mode 3 is data transfer mode. Data bytes will be written into the FIFO by the A/D converter.  
The data byte read from the address is the first available byte in the data FIFO if it is not  
empty. If the FIFO is empty then the most recent byte written into the FIFO will be returned.  
The data FIFO register is read-only under this mode.  
5.2.1.2 Mode Setting  
The FIFO operation mode setting is always initiated by the data FIFO flush command with the  
access/program bit set to ‘0’ (bit 0 at base + 7) before data acquisition is started. This will set  
mode 0 (threshold setting mode). After the threshold is programmed or verified, set the bit to  
‘1’ so the following read/write operations to the FIFO will be taken as data access operations.  
The A/D circuit is in idle mode before it is moved into run mode by a trigger command (or an  
arm command with pre-trigger). For one-shot operation, the A/D circuit will be set to run  
mode after it receives the trigger signal. It will not return to idle mode until the specified scan  
list is completed or an A/D stop command is received. For continuous trigger operation, the  
A/D circuit will stay in run mode after being triggered (or armed with the pre-trigger option)  
until an A/D stop command is received.  
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5.2.1.3 FIFO Flags  
When reading the register under mode 1 or 3, the first available data byte from the data FIFO  
will be returned if it is not empty, otherwise the returned byte is not defined. The FIFO full  
flag will be cleared after the data FIFO register is read provided there are no more data bytes  
written into the FIFO by the A/D converter under mode 1 or 3. The same will happen to the  
FIFO almost full flag if the data bytes available in the FIFO are less than the almost full  
threshold. The FIFO empty flag will be set immediately after the last byte is read from the  
FIFO. FIFO size is measured in bytes and is 4096. Table 5-8 lists the FIFO flag status.  
Table 5-8. Data FIFO Flag Status  
Data bytes in FIFO  
0
Empty  
True  
Almost Full  
False  
Full  
False  
False  
False  
True  
1 to (Threshold - 1)  
Threshold to (FIFO size - 1)  
FIFO size (4096)  
False  
False  
False  
False  
True  
True  
5.2.2 Scan List Queue Register (base + 1)  
The Scan List Queue Register is considered the access port to the scan list queue which can  
hold up to 2048 entries (each has two bytes). Each entry specifies an analog input channel and  
it’s associated gain as well as other settings.  
Note:  
Although the scan list queue register is 8 bits wide, it is required that the  
register be accessed as a 16-bit word to guarantee integrity. The low byte (LSB or the least  
significant byte) should always be accessed first, followed by the high byte (MSB or the most  
significant byte). The bit definition is explained in Table 5-9.  
Table 5-9. Scan List Queue Entry Bit Definition  
Bit  
15  
Byte  
MSB Reserved  
Definition  
Explanation  
as 0  
14  
MSB Analog input mode  
1/0 : differential/single-ended  
00/01/10/11 : 1/2/4/8  
don’t care  
13-12 MSB Internal gain selection  
11 MSB Not in use  
10-8 MSB Internal channel selection  
0000..1111 : channel 0..7  
Set to ‘1’ for the 1st entry in the  
for expansion cards (SSH)  
00/01/10/11 : 1/2/4/8  
0000..1111 : channel 0..7  
7
LSB  
LSB  
LSB  
LSB  
Starting channel mark  
Reserved  
6
5-4  
3-0  
External gain selection  
External channel selection  
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5.2.2.1 Scan List Queue Programming  
The scan list queue must be programmed when the A/D circuit card is idle. Each queue entry  
contains two bytes as described above and the integrity of the entry must be guaranteed. (The  
scan list queue is write only). The queue should be flushed before writing into it. Refer to the  
Auxiliary Control Register section for information on scan list queue reset. The first entry of  
the queue should have bit 7 (LSB) set to “1” as the first channel mark. For the remaining  
entries, set the bit to “0”. The synchronous sample hold bit (LSB) is not used by DAQP card  
and is reserved for expansion cards that support synchronous sample hold.  
Example 1  
Table 5-10 lists the required queue entries to specify a scan list of three single-ended internal  
channels: 0, 12, and 7; with a gain of 2 for channel 0 and a gain of 4 for channels 12 and 7:  
Table 5-10. Scan List Queue Programming Example 1  
Entry  
Binary  
Hex  
1080  
Explanation  
1
2
3
0001 0000 1000 0000  
0010 1100 0000 0000  
0010 0111 0000 0000  
Select channel 0, gain 2, 1st entry  
entry  
2C00 Select channel 12, gain 4  
2700  
Select channel 7, gain 4  
Example 2  
Table 5-10 lists the required queue entries to specify a scan list of 4 differential internal  
channels: 2, 1, 6 and 7; with gain of 1 for all channels:  
Table 5-11. Scan List Queue Programming Example 2  
Entry  
Binary  
Hex  
4280  
4100  
4600  
4700  
Explanation  
Select channel 2, gain 1, 1st entry  
Select channel 1, gain 1  
1
2
3
4
0100 0010 1000 0000  
0100 0001 0000 0000  
0100 0110 0000 0000  
0100 0111 0000 0000  
Select channel 6, gain 1  
Select channel 7, gain 1  
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5.2.2.2 Channel Configuration  
Bits 5 and 4 (LSB) in a queue entry specify the gain of the external expansion card for the  
external channel selected by bits 0-3 of the same byte. Each expansion card has up to 16  
channels (0, 1, 2, ..., 15). Each channel may have a gain of 1, 2, 4 or 8 (low gain voltage input  
card) or 1, 10, 100 or 1000 (high gain voltage input card). If there is no expansion card for the  
internal channel specified then the external channel and gain selection in the LSB will be  
ignored. However, the first channel mark on bit 7 should always be properly set. The internal  
channel is selected by bits 8-11 (MSB), while the internal gain for the selected channel is  
specified by bit 12 and 13 (MSB). The internal gain can only be 1, 2, 4 or 8. Bit 14 (MSB)  
determines whether the input is differential (1) or single-ended (0). There are 8 singled-ended  
channels, but only 4 differential channels. This bit should always be set to “0” if the selected  
internal channel is connected to an expansion card because the expansion channels are always  
single-ended. Bit 15 (MSB) is not used by the DAQP card and should be set to “0”.  
5.2.2.3 Analog Input Offset Correction  
The input to the A/D converter is shorted to ground if bit 14 (MSB) is set to “1” while the  
internal channel selection bits (8-10) specify an internal channels 4-7 (bit 11 is not used). This  
configuration can be used for analog input offset correction.Control Register (base + 2)  
The control register specifies the pacer clock source and pre-scaler, expansion mode, A/D  
interrupt enable control and part of the A/D trigger control. Table 5-12 lists the control  
register bit definition.  
Table 5-12. Control Register Bit Definition  
Bit  
Function  
Explanation  
00 : External clock  
7-6 Pacer clock source  
5
4
3
2
1
0
Expansion mode  
EOS interrupt  
FIFO interrupt  
Trigger mode  
Trigger source  
Trigger edge  
0/1 : disable/enable  
0/1 : disable/enable  
0/1 : disable/enable  
0/1 : one-shot/continuous  
0/1 : internal/external  
0/1 : rising/falling  
5.2.2.4 Clock Source  
If selected, the external clock source must not exceed 5 MHz with a minimum pulse width of  
200 ns. The external clock frequency can be as low as necessary or even a DC signal and there  
is no limit on maximum pulse width.  
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5.2.2.5 Expansion Mode  
Bit 5 must be set to “1” if there is an expansion card(s) connected to the DAQP card. All of the  
digital output lines (bits 0-3) will be used for external channel selection and two of the four  
digital input lines (bit 1 and 3) will be used for external gain selection.  
5.2.2.6 Interrupt Enable  
Bits 4 and 3 are used for interrupt enable control. The end-of-scan (EOS) interrupt will be  
enabled (disabled) by setting bit 4 to “1” (“0”). Setting bit 3 to “1” (“0”) will enable (disable)  
the data FIFO interrupt when the A/D data available in the FIFO passes the almost full  
threshold. Since the EOS and FIFO threshold events are latched into the status register,  
temporarily disabling and then re-enabling the interrupt will not cause an interrupt to be lost  
as long as there are no repeated events during the time the interrupt is disabled.  
5.2.2.7 Trigger Mode/Source  
Bit 2 determines the trigger mode and is set to “0” for one-shot mode and “1” for continuous  
trigger mode. In one-shot mode, each trigger signal will start one scan of the analog input  
channels specified by the scan list. In continuous mode, the trigger signal will start the first  
scan of the analog input channels specified by the scan list and then subsequent scans will be  
intiated each time the pacer clock fires until an A/D stop command is received.  
Bit 1 specifies the trigger source and is set to “1” for external trigger (either TTL or analog  
depending on the setting of bit 7 in the auxiliary control register) and “0” for internal trigger  
(software trigger). When set to internal trigger, the trigger edge selection can be ignored. The  
external trigger signal shares the same pin on the interface connector with digital input bit 0.  
5.2.2.8 Trigger Edge  
Bit 0 selects the external trigger edge. To chose the falling edge of the external trigger signal,  
set this bit to “1”, otherwise the rising edge is selected. Edge selection is ignored if the  
internal trigger source is specified.  
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5.2.2.9 Analog Trigger Threshold  
The analog trigger threshold can only be set by the output of D/A channel 1, with an  
equivalent range from -10V to +10V (full A/D converter input range). The threshold level is  
set at the A/D converter input (after the programmable gain amplifier), not the one at the  
input connector (before the PGA). The following formula is used to convert the code value  
(C/-2048 to 2047) written into D/A channel 1 to the trigger level set against the analog input  
voltage (U) for the selected A/D input channel:  
U = (C/2048) * (10/G)  
where U is in volts and G is the internal gain of the selected analog input channel. In the case  
of an expansion card, further calculation can be performed by converting the value of U  
obtained above with the transfer function of the expansion card. There is a fixed hysteresis of  
about 10 mV in the analog comparator circuit used for generating the analog trigger. The  
accuracy of the analog trigger level is typically 1% of the A/D input range (±10v), or within  
±0.1v.  
The selected analog input channel is always the one specified as the first entry of the scan list  
queue (the one with the first channel mark set to “1”). However, this is not the case with the  
pre-trigger option. After receiving the arm command, the A/D converter is already scanning  
the analog input channels specified in the scan list. The analog comparator generates an  
analog trigger any time it’s input passes through the trigger threshold. For example, if one of  
the input channels specified in the scan list is below the threshold while another is above it,  
the trigger is generated because the analog comparator input passes through the threshold in  
either direction during channel scanning. The following conditions must both be met to use  
the analog trigger with pre-trigger option selected: (1) The input channels specified in the scan  
list must be either all below or all above the analog trigger threshold before the trigger event  
occurs. (2) When the trigger event occurs, at least one of the input channels passes across the  
threshold in either direction and at least one input channel stays on the original side.  
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5.2.3 Status Register (base + 2)  
The status register is read only and shares the same offset as the control register. It reports  
data FIFO flag, A/D interrupt and A/D conversion status. Table 5-13 lists the status register  
bit definition.  
Table 5-13. Status Register Bit Definition  
Bit  
7
Status  
Explanation  
0/1 : busy / idle  
0/1 : no / yes  
Scanning status  
6
A/D running status  
Data lost event  
5
0/1 : no / yes  
4
End of scan event  
FIFO threshold event  
Data FIFO full  
0/1 : no / yes  
3
0/1 : no / yes  
2
0/1 : false / true  
0/1 : false / true  
0/1 : false / true  
1
Data FIFO almost full  
Data FIFO empty  
0
Bit 7 shows the scan status and is set to “0” when the DAQP card is scanning the input  
channels specified by the scan list and then “1” upon scan completion.  
Bit 6 is the A/D running flag. A “1” here indicates indicates the DAQP card has been  
triggered and is acquiring data (busy), while a “0” means it is idle. If the pre-trigger is  
selected, this bit will be set as soon as the arm command is received. If pre-trigger is not  
selected, then this bit will be set after a trigger is received.  
Bit 3, 4 and 5 are the event latches. When an event is detected, the corresponding bit will be set  
to “1” until the status register is read which then clears all event bits to “0”. Bit 5 is used for  
data lost events, bit 4 for end-of-scan (EOS) events and bit 3 for the FIFO threshold event.  
When the corresponding interrupt is enabled, a “1” in bit 3 (or bit 4) will also cause an  
interrupt. Bits 0, 1 and 2 are the data FIFO flags.  
Each time the status register is read, the latched events (bits 3, 4 and 5) will be cleared. This  
structure is very efficient, yet it can cause events to be lost if the read action overwrites the  
event setting so that the corresponding event gets lost. This can be critical in a tight  
“check-and-wait” loop where the status register is read and checked for the expected events to  
occur.  
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5.2.4 Digital I/O Register  
5.2.4.1 Digital Output  
The four digital output lines share the same pins on the interface connector as the four  
external channel selection bits. When using an expansion card(s), bit 5 of the control register  
(base + 2) should be set to “1” so that the four digital output lines will be driven by the  
external channel selection bits from the scan FIFO. If bit 5 of the control register is set to  
“0”(default after reset), then the four output lines are driven by the values in bits 0 to 3 latched  
during the last write operation. In other words, the digital output bits are valid only when the  
DAQP card is NOT in expansion mode. Table 5-14 lists the digital output register bit  
definition.  
Table 5-14. Digital Output Register Bit Definition  
Bits  
Normal Mode  
Expansion Mode  
0-3 Digital output bits 0-3  
4-7 Reserved as all “0”  
IgnoredIgnored, the four output lines will  
be driven by the external channel selection  
bits in the scan list FIFO  
Ignored  
5.2.4.2 Digital Input  
Two of the digital input lines are shared with the external trigger (bit 0) and the external clock  
(bit 2). The other two lines are used for external gain control in expansion mode (if bit 2 of the  
control register is set to “1”). The digital input lines are not latched.  
Although the digital input lines are also used as external trigger, external clock and the  
external gain selection; the current status of these lines will always be returned when reading  
the port. The line status does not affect the digital output register. It’s contents cannot be read  
back directly, even though they share the same port offset with the digital input register. Table  
5-15 lists the digital input register bit definition.  
Table 5-15. Digital Input Register Bit Definition  
Bits  
0
Normal Mode  
Digital input bit 0, also serve as external trigger  
Digital input bit 1  
Expansion Mode  
The same as in normal mode  
External gain select, low bit  
The same as in normal mode  
External gain select, high bit  
All “0”  
1
2
Digital input bit 2, also serve as external clock  
Digital input bit 3  
3
4-7  
All “0”  
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5.2.5 Pacer Clock (base + 4, + 5, + 6)  
The pacer clock is actually a 24-bit auto re-load frequency divider. It contains a 24 bit divisor  
register, a 24 bit counter, an internal clock pre-scaler and a clock source multiplexer. Figure  
5-1 shows the pacer clock block diagram.  
10 MHz  
Divide by 2  
24 bit Counter  
Divide by 10  
Divide by 100  
Pacer Clock  
Output  
24 bit Register  
External Clock Input  
Figure 5-1. Pacer Clock Block Diagram  
The clock source selection is specified by bits 6 and 7 in the control register (base + 2). The  
24-bit register occupies 3 ports, in which the low byte is located at base + 4, the middle byte at  
base + 5 and the high byte at base + 6. All three registers are write only. The pacer clock will  
not generate a clock pulse output until the A/D circuit is running (after receiving the arm  
command in pre-trigger mode or after receiving a trigger when pre-trigger is not selected).  
The pacer clock is not functioning in one-shot mode. In continuous mode, the trigger will  
serve as the first clock output pulse, and load the counter from the register. The counter will  
count down the input clock pulse until it is zero and then an output clock pulse is generated  
and the counter is reloaded. Pacer clock output will continue until the DAQP card receives the  
stop command which is generated by writing a ‘1’ to bit 4 of the auxiliary control register (base  
+ 7).  
The clock rate is determined as follows: Rate = Source Frequency / (Divisor Count + 1) .  
Example 1  
If an internal clock source is applied at 100 kHz (control register bits 7,6 = 11) and the divisor  
count is 49, then the pacer clock output frequency = 100 kHz / (49 + 1) = 2 kHz.  
Example 2  
If an external clock source is applied at 120 kHz (control register bits 7,6 = 00) and the divisor  
count is 39, then the pacer clock output frequency = 120 kHz / (39 + 1) = 3 kHz.  
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5.2.6 Command Register (base + 7)  
The command register is used for sending control commands to the DAQP card including  
arm/trigger (or start A/D), scan list queue and data FIFO flush, stop A/D and timer/counter  
latch commands. It also sets the data program/access mode for the data FIFO. The command  
bits (bit 3 to 7) are actually ‘monostable’ or self-clearing after the specified command function  
is completed and do not require clearing. Although it is possible, sending multiple  
commands in one I/O instruction is not recommended.  
The data FIFO program/access bit and the scan speed selection bits are latched each time they  
are written. The user must avoid changing these bits accidentally when sending the  
commands to the DAQP series cards. Bit definition is shown in Table 5-16.  
Table 5-16. Command Register Bit Definition  
Bit  
7
Function  
Explanation  
1 = send trigger/arm, 0 = no action  
1 = flush, 0 = no action  
Trigger/Arm command  
Flush data FIFO command  
Flush scan list command  
Stop A/D command  
6
5
1 = flush, 0 = no action  
4
1 = stop, 0 = no action  
3
Latch timer/counter command  
Scan rate selection  
1 = latch, 0 = no action  
2-1  
0
00 = 100, 01 = 50, 10 = 25 (kHz)  
1 = data access, 0 = program threshold  
Data FIFO program/access  
5.2.6.1 Trigger/Arm Command  
If the trigger source is internal (software trigger), writing a “1” to bit 7 will send a trigger to the  
DAQP card and start the A/D conversion process. If the trigger source is external (TTL or  
analog), writing a “1” to bit 7 will serve as the arm command. The arm command tells the  
DAQP card to look for the specified external trigger edge from the moment the command is  
received. Never issue the arm command and the A/D stop command simultaneously. The  
arm command initiates data acquisition and the A/D stop command terminates it.  
5.2.6.2 Flush Scan List Queue Command  
The scan list queue must be flushed before it can be programmed. This command should be  
issued before the flush data FIFO command. The queue may have up to 2048 word entries,  
each containing two bytes. It is the user’s responsibility to guarantee the integrity of the  
entries.  
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5.2.6.3 Flush Data FIFO Command  
The data FIFO should be flushed before data acquisition is initiated by the trigger/arm  
command, but not until after the scan list has been configured. The flush command may also  
be followed by FIFO threshold programming. After the FIFO is flushed, the FIFO empty flag  
will be set to “1” and the almost full and full flags reset to “0”. Anytime the data FIFO is  
flushed, the default threshold setting will be restored (7 bytes to full) by the hardware. The  
data FIFO threshold should always be programmed after flushing if the required threshold is  
different from the default one.  
5.2.6.4 A/D Stop Command  
Once data acquisition is initiated by the trigger/arm command, it can only be stopped by  
receiving the A/D stop command. The A/D stop command should be issued as soon as the  
required data points are collected to prevent data FIFO overflow. Data FIFO overflow is the  
only flag that indicates lost data during the acquisition process. Without the stop command,  
the A/D can continue to run, filling the data FIFO. When the FIFO is full, it will ignore data  
samples coming from the A/D converter.  
5.2.6.5 Data FIFO Program/Access Control  
The A/D data FIFO has two programmable thresholds, almost empty and almost full, and two  
associated flags. The almost empty threshold and flag are not used. By default, the thresholds  
are set to 7 bytes (7 to full and 7 to empty) when reset, powered up or anytime the FIFO is  
flushed. It can be programmed to any value between 1 and FIFO size - 1 (in bytes).  
To program the FIFO threshold, make sure the A/D has been stopped. Set this bit to “0” by  
writing an all “0” byte to the auxiliary control register. Then send an A/D FIFO flush  
command with the same bit setting by writing a byte of 40H (hex 40) to the same register.  
This will put the FIFO into program mode. The following read/write operation will be  
directed to the threshold registers instead when accessing the data FIFO at base +1. The 4 byte  
threshold setting should be written into the data FIFO by doing four consecutive write  
operations. Optionally, the threshold setting can be read back for verification by doing four  
consecutive read operations. Table 5-17 lists the 4 byte threshold setting format.  
Table 5-17. Data FIFO Threshold Setting  
Byte  
Definition  
Valid Range  
0..255  
0
1
2
3
Low byte of the almost empty threshold  
High byte of the almost empty threshold  
Low byte of the almost full threshold  
High byte of the almost full threshold  
0..15  
0..255  
0..15 (2K option)  
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After the thresholds are programmed, set the access control bit to “1” by writing a byte of 01H  
into the auxiliary control register. This will make the following read/write operation access  
the data bytes in the FIFO instead of it’s thresholds. It is recommended that the access control  
bit be set to “1” when sending other commands (flush scan list, stop A/D, or trig/arm) to the  
DAQP card by writing into the auxiliary control register. A useful tip for safe operation is to  
set the bit to “0” only when flushing and programming the FIFO thresholds. Although the  
almost empty threshold is never used, it must be programmed because the four configuration  
bytes must be accessed as an entire entity.  
5.2.6.6 Latch Timer/Counter Command  
This command will latch the current value of the timer/counter into the 16 bit read latch  
register and can be executed if the timer/counter is running (on the fly) or not. The latched  
value will not change until a new latch command is issued again.  
5.2.7 D/A Data Port (base + 8, base + 9)  
The D/A data port can be accessed either as a 16-bit word at base + 8, or two consecutive  
bytes at base + 8 (low byte) and base + 9 (high byte). The port is write only. For simplicity,  
the 16-bit word is assumed in the following discussion.  
Bit 12 to 15 selects the D/A channel, in which bit 13, 14 and 15 must all be set to “0”, while bit  
12 is “0” for selecting D/A channel 0 or “1” for D/A channel 1.  
Table 5-18. D/A Data Port Bit Definition  
Bits  
15-13  
12  
Definition  
Reserved  
Explanation  
all “0”  
D/A channel selection  
D/A output code value  
“0” for channel 0, “1” for channel 1  
-2048..2047 in 2’s complement  
11-0  
5.2.7.1 D/A Channel Output  
Bits 0 to 11 specify the D/A channel data, which is always in 2’s complement format. The  
bipolar D/A channel output ranges from -5v to +5v, with the corresponding code value from  
-2048 to 2047. The actual D/A output voltage (U in Volts) can be determined from the output  
code value C using the following formula:  
U = (C*5/2048)  
The output of D/A channel 1 is used for setting the analog trigger threshold.  
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5.2.7.2 D/A Port Interface  
The data link between the D/A data port and the D/A converter is a serial link. The port  
interface contains a 16 bit buffer register and a 16 bit shift register. On the other side of the  
link, there are input and output registers in each D/A channel of the D/A converter. The  
actual analog output voltage will be determined by the code value loaded into the output  
register.  
A data word written into the D/A port will first be latched into the 16 bit buffer register. It is  
then loaded into the 16 bit shift register and shifted into the D/A channel’s input register  
across the serial link. Bit 5 in the auxiliary status register is set to “1” to show that the buffer is  
occupied when the buffer register is written. It will remain “1” until it’s contents are loaded  
into the shift register and then the bit is cleared to indicate the buffer is empty.  
Since the serial link needs 16 of the 2 MHz clock cycles to complete one 16 bit data word, it  
will take about 8 ms for each data word transfer. The buffer register is loaded into the shift  
register when the latter has finished shifting. It is recommended that this bit be checked and  
the buffer register be emptied before writing to it otherwise the original data in the buffer  
register may be corrupted. The interface hardware will neither prevent this from happening  
nor report it as an error.  
5.2.7.3 D/A Update Modes  
Depending on the D/A update mode, the data word shifted into the D/A channel may either  
be passed immediately to the output register (direct update mode) or be loaded into the  
output register upon receiving a synchronous event (synchronous update mode).  
Table 5-19. D/A Update Modes  
Bit 1, 0  
Mode  
Update  
00  
01  
10  
11  
0
1
2
3
Direct update, immediately after the data word is written  
Each time when the timer overflows  
Each time when the gate control goes from low to high  
Each time the A/D pacer clock fires  
Bits 1 and 0 of the auxiliary control register (base + 15, write) define the D/A update mode. In  
mode 0, the D/A converter output register is updated when a data word is shifted to it’s shift  
register, bypassing it’s input register, after the D/A port buffer register is written. There is no  
synchronization between the two D/A channels in mode 0. They each operate independently.  
In modes 1, 2 and 3 (synchronous modes), a data word written to the port buffer register is  
loaded to the D/A channel input register before it is written to it’s output register. Then upon  
receiving a synchronous event, the output registers of both D/A channels are updated  
simultaneously. In mode 1, the synchronous event is timer overflow. In mode 2, the event is  
the gate control moving from low to high. In mode 3, it is the pacer clock.  
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5.2.8 Timer/Counter Port (base + 10, base + 11)  
The timer/counter port can be accessed as either a 16 bit word at base + 8, or two consecutive  
bytes at base + 8 (low byte) and base + 9 (high byte). The port contains a 16 bit reload register,  
a 16 bit up-counter and a 16 bit read latch register and the associated control logic.  
The reload register is write only. It holds the initial value (or the reload value) for the  
up-counter. Each time the counter overflows, the next clock rising edge will reload the counter  
with this value. The same value is also loaded to the counter as it’s initial value in mode 0.  
The read latch register is read only. It holds the current count of the up-counter when a latch  
command is received. The content of this register will not change until the next latch  
command is received. The up-counter cannot be accessed directly. It will reload on the next  
rising edge of the selected clock from the reload register either when it reaches its final count  
of 65535 (hexadecimal FFFF) or when the timer/counter is in mode 0.  
5.2.8.1 Timer/Counter Operation Modes  
Bits 3 and 4 in the auxiliary control register (base + 15, write) determine the timer modes as  
summarized in Table 5-20.  
Table 5-20. Timer/Counter Modes  
Bits 4,  
00  
Mode  
Timer/Counter Operation  
Stop and reload the up-counter from the reload register  
Pause  
0
1
2
3
01  
10  
Start/Continue  
11  
Operation controlled by the gate input:  
Mode 0 is used for reloading the up-counter. Note that reloading will only occur when the  
next rising edge of the selected clock source is received. The internal clock source requires at  
least 1 ms to complete reload. When the timer/counter is used for counting external pulses, it  
is recommended that mode 0 and the internal clock source be selected first to guarantee the  
initial reload by the internal clock Once reload is completed, then the source can be switched  
to external.  
Mode 1 is designed to temporarily pause the up-counter. In this mode the up-counter will be  
frozen.  
Mode 2 is considered the “go” mode. The up-counter will either start to count or continue  
counting up on the rising edge of the selected clock source. If the up-counter reaches it’s final  
count, then it will reload on the next clock rising edge.  
In mode 3, up-counter operation is controlled by the external gate signal. The counter “goes”  
when the signal is high (“1”) and stops when the signal is low (“0”).  
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5.2.8.2 Timer/Counter Clock Source  
Bit 2 of the auxiliary control register (base + 15, write) selects the timer/counter clock source.  
The source can be either the internal 1 MHz clock (bit 2 is “0”) or the external clock (bit 2 is  
“1”). Because of the pin confinement, the timer/counter external clock input is shared with the  
A/D external clock input, which is also digital input bit 2. The external clock should have a  
minimum pulse width of 100 ns and a maximum frequency of 5 MHz.  
5.2.8.3 Reading Timer/Counter Contents  
The contents of the up-counter can be read “on the fly” by sending the read latch command.  
Upon receiving the command, the current content of the up-counter is latched into the read  
latch register. The timer/counter control logic guarantees the integrity of the latched value.  
The read latch operation works in all four timer/counter modes. The latched value in the read  
latch register will not change until next read latch command is received.  
5.2.8.4 Timer Divisor/Counter Modulus  
The up-counter always counts up from it’s initial value (determined by the reload register) to  
its final count (always 65535 or hexadecimal FFFF). “D” is the divisor (also called counter  
modulus) of the timer and “X” is the value written to the reload register. The relationship  
between the two is as follows:  
D = 65536 - X  
The up-counter counts up from X to 65535. D=1 or X=65535 should be avoided because the  
up-counter will stick with these values.  
5.2.8.5 Timer/Counter Overflow  
When the timer/counter reaches it’s final count of 65535, the next rising edge of the selected  
clock source will reload the up-counter from the reload register and set the timer/counter  
overflow event latch to “1” (bit 4 of the auxiliary status register). This will cause an interrupt  
if the timer/counter interrupt is enabled (bit 5 of the auxiliary control register set to “1”). The  
overflow event latch can only be cleared by writing a “0” to bit 5 of the auxiliary control  
register. Reading the auxiliary status register will not clear the timer/counter overflow event  
latch.  
The timer/counter output will be “1” for one clock cycle as the timer/counter overflows after  
reaching the final value of 65535. If the timer/counter is paused or stuck at the final count, the  
output pin will then be high as long as the final count holds.  
The timer/counter is totally independent of the pacer clock, which is dedicated to generating  
the sample rate for the A/D converter in continuous trigger mode. The timer/counter can be  
used for the D/A converter to synchronize its channel output update.  
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5.2.9 Auxiliary Control Register (base + 15)  
This register configures the operation of A/D, D/A and the timer counter. It is 8-bit wide and  
write only. Bit 7 picks between TTL and analog trigger source. Bit 6 sets the pre-trigger  
option. Bit 5 is for the timer/counter interrupt control. Bits 3 and 4 determine the  
timer/counter operation modes while bit 2 selects the timer/counter clock source. Bits 1 and 0  
specify the D/A update modes.  
Table 5-21. Auxiliary Control Register Bit Definition  
Bit  
7
Function  
Explanation  
0 selects TTL trigger  
External trigger source  
1 selects analog trigger  
6
5
Pre-trigger option  
1 = with pre-trigger, 0 = without  
Timer/Counter interrupt  
Clear overflow event latch  
1 = Enabled, 0 = Disabled  
by writing ‘0’ into this bit  
4,3 Timer/Counter mode  
00 = Reload  
01 = Pause  
10 = Go  
11 = Go/Pause by external gate signal  
2
Timer/Counter clock source 1 = External, 0 = Internal (1 MHz)  
1,0 D/A update mode  
00 = Direct update  
01 = When timer/counter overflows  
10 = When ext. gate goes low to high  
11 = When pacer clock fires  
5.2.10 Auxiliary Status Register (base + 15)  
Bits 0-3 and bit 7 in this register are structured so that these bits can be referenced without the  
associated side effect of “clear after read” on latched events. The “clear after read” side effect  
is preserved for the status register (base + 2). Bits 0 and 1 are the data FIFO flags. Bit 2 is the  
data lost event latch. These three bits are defined exactly the same as in the status register.  
Bit 3 in this register is the logic “OR” of the two event latches in the status register, (EOS event  
latch and data FIFO event latch). This bit is “1” if either the EOS or FIFO event is latched. It is  
“0” if both the EOS and FIFO events are cleared by power up, reset or reading the status  
register. Table 5-22 lists the bit definition.  
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Table 5-22. Auxiliary Status Register Bit Definition  
Bit  
7
Function  
A/D running flag  
Explanation  
1 = Running, 0 = Idle  
6
A/D trigger flag  
1 = Triggered, 0 = Not yet  
1 = Occupied, 0 = Empty  
1 = Overflow latched, 0 = Not yet  
5
D/A port buffer register flag  
Timer/Counter overflow event latch  
4
3
A/D conversion event latched (Logic  
“OR” of A/D EOS and FIFO almost full  
event latches)  
1 = Either EOS or FIFO almost full  
event has been latched  
0 = Neither event has been latched yet  
2
1
0
Data lost event latch  
1 = Data lost latched, 0 = Not yet  
1 = FIFO almost full, 0 = Not yet  
1 = FIFO empty, 0 = Not empty  
A/D data FIFO almost full flag  
A/D data FIFO empty flag  
Bit 4 indicates the timer/counter overflow event. This bit is set to ”1” whenever the  
timer/counter overflow occurs (on the next rising edge of the selected clock source after it  
reaches the final count). This bit cannot be cleared by reading the auxiliary status register. It  
can only be cleared by writing a “0” into bit 5 of the auxiliary control register. Bit 5 is the D/A  
port buffer register flag and is set to “1” if the register is occupied or “0” if it is empty. With  
the pre-trigger option selected, bit 6 is set to “1” when the external trigger is received. This bit  
remains “1” until data acquisition is terminated by receiving the A/D stop command. Bit 6  
set to “0” means the trigger has not been received yet. If the pre-trigger option is not selected  
or bit 6 of the auxiliary control register is set to “0”, then this bit should be ignored. Bit 7 is  
exactly the same as bit 6 in the status register (base + 2).  
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6. Specifications  
A/D Converter  
Acquisition + Conversion  
Monotonicity  
Integral linearity error  
Differential linearity error  
Full scale error  
12-Bit Version  
2 ms + 8 ms  
No missing codes  
± 1 LSB  
± 1 LSB  
± 0.5 %  
16-Bit Version  
2 ms + 8 ms  
No missing codes  
± 3 LSB  
+3/-2 LSB  
± 0.5 %  
Aperture delay  
40 ns  
40 ns  
Analog Input  
Number of input channels  
Input range  
4 differential / 8 single-ended, expandable to 128  
±10, ±5, ±2.5, ±1.25V  
±10, ±1, ±0.1, ±0.01V  
1, 2, 4, 8  
1, 10, 100, 1000  
±30 V  
(DAQP-208 and DAQP-308)  
(DAQP-208H)  
(DAQP-208 and DAQP-308)  
(DAQP-208H)  
Programmable gain  
Maximum over-voltage  
Input impedance  
100 MW (DC)  
A/D Miscellaneous Specifications  
Data FIFO depth  
Scan list length  
Scan speed  
2048 samples  
2048 entries  
10 ms, 20 ms, 40 ms  
Trigger source  
Trigger mode  
Pre-trigger option  
TTL trigger  
Internal (Software) / External (TTL, Analog)  
Continuous / One-shot  
Programmable, up to the data FIFO depth  
0.8 V (low) / 2.2 V (high), Rising / Falling edges  
Threshold set in full A/D input range (± 10V)  
Rising / Falling directions, 10 mV hysteresis  
0.006 Hz to 100 kHz (with internal clock source)  
DC - 5 MHz  
Analog trigger  
Sampling rate  
External clock rate  
D/A Converter  
Resolution  
12-bit  
Relative Accuracy  
Bipolar Zero Error  
Differential Nonlinearity  
Full scale error  
± 1 LSB  
± 7 LSB max  
± 1 LSB max  
± 7 LSB max  
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Analog Output  
Number of output channels  
Output Settling Time  
Output range  
2 (single-ended only)  
10 ms  
±5V (bipolar only)  
±2 mA  
Output Current  
DC Output impedance  
0.5 W (typical)  
Timer/Counter  
Word length  
Clock Source  
External Clock Input  
Overflow Output  
Divisor / Modulus Range  
16-bit, with auto reload and read latch  
Internal (1 MHz) / External (DC - 5 MHz)  
TTL, pulse width > 100 ns, frequency < 5 MHz  
TTL  
2 - 65535  
Digital I/O  
Digital input channels  
Digital output channels  
Maximum source current  
Maximum sinking current  
Minimum logic ‘1’ level  
Maximum logic ‘0’ level  
4 (no latch)  
4 (latched)  
0.5 mA  
2.5 mA  
2.4 V  
0.8 V  
General Specifications  
Power consumption  
Operating temperature  
Storage temperature  
Humidity  
210 mA (full power), 70 mA (power down)  
0 °C to 50 °C  
0 °C to 70 °C  
0 to 95%, non-condensing  
Standard PCMCIA type II  
1.5 oz (for reference only)  
Size (cable not included)  
Weight  
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DAQP-208/208H/308  
Users Manual  
Version 2.30  
April 12, 2000  
Part No. 940-0092-230  
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