Agilent Technologies Video Gaming Accessories 6811B User Manual

User’s Guide  
AC Power Solutions  
Agilent Models 6811B, 6812B, and 6813B  
For instruments with Serial Numbers:  
Agilent 6811B: US38390101-up  
Agilent 6812B: US38390101-up  
Agilent 6813B: US38390101-up  
Agilent Part No. 5962-0829  
Microfiche No 5962-0830  
Printed in U.S.A.  
December, 1998  
Update April 2000  
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Safety Summary  
The following general safety precautions must be observed during all phases of operation of this instrument.  
Failure to comply with these precautions or with specific warnings elsewhere in this manual violates safety  
standards of design, manufacture, and intended use of the instrument. Agilent Technologies assumes no liability  
for the customer’s failure to comply with these requirements.  
WARNING: LETHAL VOLTAGES  
Ac sources can supply 425 V peak at their output. DEATH on contact may result if the output terminals or circuits  
connected to the output are touched when power is applied.  
GENERAL  
This product is a Safety Class 1 instrument (provided with a protective earth terminal). The protective features of  
this product may be impaired if it is used in a manner not specified in the operation instructions.  
Any LEDs used in this product are Class 1 LEDs as per IEC 825-1.  
ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITONS  
This instrument is intended for indoor use in an installation category II, pollution degree 2 environment. It is  
designed to operate at a maximum relative humidity of 95% and at altitudes of up to 2000 meters. Refer to the  
specifications tables for the ac mains voltage requirements and ambient operating temperature range.  
BEFORE APPLYING POWER  
Verify that the product is set to match the available line voltage, the correct fuse is installed, and all safety  
precautions are taken. Note the instrument’s external markings described under "Safety Symbols".  
GROUND THE INSTRUMENT  
To minimize shock hazard, the instrument chassis and cover must be connected to an electrical ground. The  
instrument must be connected to the ac power mains through a grounded power cable, with the ground wire firmly  
connected to an electrical ground (safety ground) at the power outlet. Any interruption of the protective (grounding)  
conductor or disconnection of the protective earth terminal will cause a potential shock hazard that could result in  
personal injury.  
ATTENTION: Un circuit de terre continu est essentiel en vue du fonctionnement sécuritaire de l’appareil.  
Ne jamais mettre l'appareil en marche lorsque le conducteur de mise … la terre est d‚branch‚.  
FUSES  
Only fuses with the required rated current, voltage, and specified type (normal blow, time delay, etc.) should be  
used. Do not use repaired fuses or short-circuited fuseholders. To do so could cause a shock or fire hazard.  
DO NOT OPERATE IN AN EXPLOSIVE ATMOSPHERE  
Do not operate the instrument in the presence of flammable gases or fumes.  
DO NOT REMOVE THE INSTRUMENT COVER  
Operating personnel must not remove instrument covers. Component replacement and internal adjustments must be  
made only by qualified service personnel.  
Instruments that appear damaged or defective should be made inoperative and secured against unintended  
operation until they can be repaired by qualified service personnel.  
3
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SAFETY SYMBOLS  
Direct current  
Alternating current  
Both direct and alternating current  
Three-phase alternating current  
Earth (ground) terminal  
Protective earth (ground) terminal  
Frame or chassis terminal  
Terminal is at earth potential. Used for measurement and control circuits designed to be  
operated with one terminal at earth potential.  
Terminal for Neutral conductor on permanently installed equipment  
Terminal for Line conductor on permanently installed equipment  
On (supply)  
Off (supply)  
Standby (supply). Units with this symbol are not completely disconnected from ac mains when  
this switch is off. To completely disconnect the unit from ac mains, either disconnect the power  
cord or have a qualified electrician install an external switch.  
In position of a bi-stable push control  
Out position of a bi-stable push control  
Caution, risk of electric shock  
Caution, hot surface  
Caution (refer to accompanying documents)  
The WARNING sign denotes a hazard. It calls attention to a procedure, practice, or the like,  
which, if not correctly performed or adhered to, could result in personal injury. Do not proceed  
beyond a WARNING sign until the indicated conditions are fully understood and met.  
WARNING  
Caution  
The CAUTION sign denotes a hazard. It calls attention to an operating procedure, or the like,  
which, if not correctly performed or adhered to, could result in damage to or destruction of part  
or all of the product. Do not proceed beyond a CAUTION sign until the indicated conditions  
are fully understood and met.  
4
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Declaration Page  
DECLARATION OF CONFORMITY  
according to ISO/IEC Guide 22 and EN 45014  
Manufacturer’s Name:  
Manufacturer’s Address:  
Agilent Technologies, Inc.  
140 Green Pond Road  
Rockaway, New Jersey 07866  
U.S.A.  
declares that the Product  
Product Name:  
a) AC Power Source/Analyzer  
b) Harmonic/Flicker Test System  
Model Number(s):  
a) Agilent 6811B, 6813B, 6812B, 6811A, 6812A, 6813A  
b) Agilent 6841A, 6842A  
conforms to the following Product Specifications:  
Safety:  
EMC:  
IEC 1010-1:1990+A1(1992) / EN 61010-1:1993  
CISPR 11:1990 / EN 55011:1991 - Group 1 Class A  
IEC 801-2:1991 / EN 50082-1:1992 - 4 kV CD, 8 kV AD  
IEC 801-3:1984 / EN 50082-1:1992 - 3 V / m  
IEC 801-4:1988 / EN 50082-1:1992 - 0.5 kV Signal Lines  
1 kV Power Lines  
Supplementary Information:  
The product herewith complies with the requirements of the Low Voltage Directive  
73/23/EEC and the EMC Directive 89/336/EEC and carries the CE-marking accordingly.  
New Jersey  
Location  
January 1997  
Date  
__  
__  
Bruce Krueger / Quality Manager  
European Contact: Your local Agilent Technologies Sales and Service Office or Agilent Technologies GmbH,  
Department TRE, Herrenberger Strasse 130, D-71034 Boeblingen (FAX:+49-7031-14-3143)  
5
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Acoustic Noise Information  
Herstellerbescheinigung  
Diese Information steht im Zusammenhang mit den Anforderungen der  
Maschinenläminformationsverordnung vom 18 Januar 1991.  
* Schalldruckpegel Lp <70 dB(A)  
* Am Arbeitsplatz  
* Normaler Betrieb  
* Nach EN 27779 (Typprüfung).  
Manufacturer’s Declaration  
This statement is provided to comply with the requirements of the German Sound Emission Directive,  
from 18 January 1991.  
* Sound Pressure Lp <70 dB(A)  
* At Operator Position  
* Normal Operation  
* According to EN 27779 (Type Test).  
Printing History  
The edition and current revision of this manual are indicated below. Reprints of this manual containing  
minor corrections and updates may have the same printing date. Revised editions are identified by a new  
printing date. A revised edition incorporates all new or corrected material since the previous printing  
date.  
Changes to the manual occurring between revisions are covered by change sheets shipped with the  
manual. In some cases, the manual change applies only to specific instruments. Instructions provided on  
the change sheet will indicate if a particular change applies only to certain instruments.  
This document contains proprietary information protected by copyright. All rights are reserved. No part  
of this document may be photocopied, reproduced, or translated into another language without the prior  
consent of Agilent Technologies. The information contained in this document is subject to change  
without notice.  
Copyright 1995, 1997, 1998 Agilent Technologies, Inc.  
Edition 1 _________August, 1995  
Edition 2 _________February, 1997  
Edition 3 _________March, 1998  
Edition 4 _________December 1998  
Update _________April 2000  
6
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Table of Contents  
Warranty Information  
Safety Summary  
Declaration of Conformity  
Acoustic Noise Information  
Printing History  
2
3
5
6
6
7
Table of Contents  
1 GENERAL INFORMATION  
Document Orientation  
Earlier AC Source Models  
Safety Considerations  
11  
11  
12  
12  
12  
13  
14  
14  
15  
16  
16  
16  
17  
18  
18  
18  
18  
19  
Options and Parts  
Description  
Capabilities  
Front Panel/Remote Operation  
Steady-state Output Characteristic  
Peak Current/Dynamic Power Capability  
Peak Current Limit  
Peak Inrush Example  
RMS Current Limit Circuit  
Voltage Regulation  
Real Time Regulation  
RMS Regulation  
Output Impedance  
Output Coupling  
2 INSTALLATION  
Inspection  
21  
21  
21  
21  
21  
21  
22  
22  
22  
23  
23  
23  
24  
25  
25  
25  
27  
27  
27  
28  
28  
28  
Damage  
Packaging Material  
Items Supplied  
Cleaning  
Location  
Bench Operation  
Rack Mounting  
Input Connections  
Input Source and Line Fuse  
Installing the Power Cord  
Output Connections  
Wire Considerations  
Voltage Drops  
Remote Sense Connections  
Remote Sensing and OVP Considerations  
Trigger Connections  
Digital Connections  
Controller Connections  
GPIB Connector  
RS-232 Interface  
7
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3 TURN-ON CHECKOUT  
Introduction  
31  
31  
31  
32  
32  
34  
34  
35  
Preliminary Checkout  
Using the Keypad  
Checkout Procedure  
In Case of Trouble  
Error Messages  
Line Fuse  
4 FRONT PANEL OPERATION  
Introduction  
37  
37  
37  
39  
40  
40  
40  
41  
42  
44  
45  
46  
47  
47  
47  
48  
48  
49  
50  
53  
55  
57  
58  
58  
Front Panel Description  
System Keys  
Function Keys  
Immediate Action Keys  
Scrolling Keys  
Meter Display Keys  
Output Control Keys  
Protection and Status Control Keys  
Trigger and List Control Keys  
Entry Keys  
Examples of Front Panel Programming  
1 - Setting the Output Voltage Amplitude  
2 - Setting the Output Frequency  
3 - Setting the DC Offset  
4 - Setting a Protection Feature  
5 - Clearing Protection Conditions  
6 - Using Transient Voltage Modes  
7 - Trigger Delays and Phase Synchronization  
8 - Using Slew Rates to Generate Waveforms  
9 - Measuring Peak Inrush Current  
10 - Setting the GPIB Address and RS-232 Parameters  
11 - Saving and Recalling Operating States  
A SPECIFICATIONS  
Specifications  
59  
59  
61  
53  
Supplemental Characteristics  
Operation Below 45 Hz  
B VERIFICATION AND CALIBRATION  
Introduction  
65  
65  
65  
66  
67  
67  
67  
68  
68  
71  
71  
Equipment Required  
Test Setup  
Performing the Verification Tests  
Turn-On Checkout Procedure  
AC Voltage Programming and Measurement Accuracy  
DC Voltage Programming and Measurement Accuracy  
RMS Current Accuracy Test  
Performing the Calibration Procedure  
Front Panel Calibration Menu  
Front Panel Calibration  
72  
8
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Enable Calibration Mode  
72  
72  
73  
73  
74  
74  
75  
75  
75  
76  
76  
76  
76  
Calibrating and Entering Voltage Offset Values  
Calibrating and Entering DC Voltage Gain Values  
Calibrating and Entering AC rms Voltage Gain Values  
Calibrating the OVP Trip Point  
Calibrating and Entering rms Current Values  
Calibrating and Entering rms Current Measurement Values  
Calibrating the Output Impedance  
Saving the Calibration Constants  
Changing the Calibration Password  
Calibration Error Messages  
Calibration Over the GPIB  
Agilent Calibration Program Listing  
C ERROR MESSAGES  
81  
81  
Error Number List  
D LINE VOLTAGE CONVERSION  
Open the Unit  
85  
85  
85  
85  
85  
86  
Check the Jumper Wire (Model Agilent 6811B/6812B only)  
Check the Line Jumpers (all Models)  
Check the Power Transformer Connector (all Models)  
Close the Unit  
INDEX  
87  
9
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1
General Information  
Document Orientation  
This manual describes the operation of the Agilent 6811B/6812B/6813B AC Power Solutions. These units  
will be referred to as "ac sources" throughout this manual. The following documents are shipped with  
your ac source:  
a Quick-Start Guide, to help you quickly get started using the ac source  
a User’s Guide, containing detailed installation, checkout, and front panel information  
a Programming Guide, containing detailed GPIB programming information  
a Quick Reference Card, designed as a memory jogger for the experienced user  
You will find information on the following tasks in these guides. Refer to the table of contents of each  
guide for a complete list of the topics.  
Topic  
Accessories and Options  
Calibrating the ac source  
Front panel keys  
Front panel programming examples  
Line voltage connections  
Line voltage ratings  
Line voltage conversion  
Operator replaceable parts  
Operator troubleshooting  
Operating characteristics  
Performance specifications  
Quick operating checkout  
Rack mounting  
Location  
Chapter 1 - this guide  
Appendix B - this guide  
Chapter 4 - this guide  
Chapter 4 - this guide  
Chapter 2 - this guide  
Appendix A - this guide  
Appendix D - this guide  
Chapter 1 - this guide  
Chapter 3 - this guide  
Appendix A - this guide  
Appendix A - this guide  
Chapter 3 - this guide  
Chapter 2 - this guide  
Chapter 2 - this guide  
Chapter 3 - Programming Guide  
Chapter 4 - Programming Guide  
Chapter 3 - this guide  
Chapter 2 - this guide  
Chapter 2 - this guide  
Chapter 2 - this guide  
Chapter 2 - this guide  
Chapter 2 - this guide  
RS-232 operation  
SCPI programming examples  
SCPI programming commands  
Turn-on/checkout  
Wiring - discrete fault indicator (DFI)  
- GPIB controller  
- load or loads  
- voltage sensing (local and remote)  
- remote inhibit (RI)  
11  
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1 - General Information  
Earlier AC Source Models  
With the exception of some minor readback specification differences, information in this manual also  
applies to the following earlier ac source models:  
Information about this  
current model  
also applies to the following earlier  
models:  
Agilent 6811B  
Agilent 6812B  
Agilent 6811A AC Power Source/Analyzer  
Agilent 6812A AC Power Source/Analyzer  
Agilent 6841A Harmonic/Flicker Test System  
in normal mode  
Agilent 6813B  
Agilent 6813A AC Power Source/Analyzer  
Agilent 6842A Harmonic/Flicker Test System  
in normal mode  
Safety Considerations  
This ac source is a Safety Class 1 instrument, which means it has a protective earth terminal. That  
terminal must be connected to earth ground through a power source equipped with a ground receptacle.  
Refer to the Safety Summary page at the beginning of this guide for general safety information. Before  
installation or operation, check the ac source and review this guide for safety warnings and instructions.  
Safety warnings for specific procedures are located at appropriate places in the guide.  
Options and Parts  
Table 1-1. Options  
Option  
0BN  
1CM  
1CP  
100  
Model  
Description  
All  
All  
All  
Extra documentation  
Rack mount kit (Agilent p/n 5062-3977)  
Rack mount kit with handles (Agilent p/n 5062-3983)  
87-106 Vac, 48-63 Hz (Japan only)  
Agilent 6811B/6812B  
Agilent 6813B  
200  
174-106 Vac, 48-63 Hz (Japan only)  
230  
831  
832  
Agilent 6811B/6812B  
Agilent 6812B/6813B  
Agilent 6813B  
191-254 Vac, 48-63 Hz  
12 AWG, 200 to 240 Vac, unterminated  
4-mm2 wire size, unterminated  
833  
834  
841  
842  
844  
845  
846  
847  
Agilent 6812B  
Agilent 6812B  
Agilent 6812B/6813B  
Agilent 6813B  
Agilent 6813B  
Agilent 6812B  
Agilent 6812B  
Agilent 6812B  
1.5-mm2 wire size, 200 to 240 Vac, unterminated  
10 AWG, 100 to 120 Vac, unterminated  
Line cord with NEMA 6-20P; 20A, 250 V plug  
Line cord with IEC 309; 32A, 220 V plug  
Line cord with NEMA 6-30P; 30A, 250 V locking plug  
Line cord with IEC 309; 16 A, 220 V plug  
Line cord with NEMA L5-30P; 30 A, 120 V plug  
Line cord with CEE 7/7; 16 A, 220 V plug  
848  
Agilent 6812B  
Line cord with BS 546; 15 A, 240 V plug  
Support rails (Agilent p/n 1494-0059) are required when rack mounting units with options 1CM and 1CP.  
Agilent 6811B units are shipped with the correct line cord for the destination country.  
12  
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General Information - 1  
The following table lists some common user-replaceable parts:  
Table 1-2. Operator Replaceable Parts  
Item Agilent Part Number  
Power cord assembly  
Rack mount kit  
4-terminal digital connector plug  
Ac input safety cover (with strain relief and bushing)  
Screw (3), ac input barrier block (6-32 x 5/16in)  
Ac output safety cover  
Line fuse for Agilent 6812B (30 AM)  
Line fuse for Agilent 6813B (25 AM)  
Line fuse for Agilent 6811B (20 AM)  
Screw (2), ac output safety cover (m4 x 0.7in)  
Screw (5), ac output barrier block (6-32 x 5/16 in)  
User’s Guide (this manual)  
see "Options"  
see "Options"  
1252-1488  
5040-1676  
N/A  
5040-1704  
2110-0910  
2110-0849  
2110-0098  
0515-0053  
N/A  
5962-0829  
5962-0889  
5962-0883  
5962-0885  
Programming Guide  
Quick Start Guide  
Quick Reference Card  
Description  
The ac source combines three instruments in one unit as shown in the following figure. The function  
generator produces waveforms with programmable amplitude, frequency, and shape. The power  
amplifier amplifies the function generator signal to produce the ac power for your application. The  
measurement functions range from a simple readback of rms voltage and current, to sophisticated  
capabilities such as waveform analysis.  
shunt  
SOURCE  
DAC  
BIPOLAR  
MEASUREMENT  
BLOCK  
WAVEFORM  
GENERATOR  
AMPLIFIER  
POWERMETER  
FFT ANALYZER  
Figure 1-1. AC Source Functional Elements  
13  
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1 - General Information  
The following model ac power sources are described in this User’s Guide:  
Model  
Description  
Agilent 6811B  
Agilent 6812B  
Agilent 6813B  
0-300 V rms; 375 VA (425 V peak; 40 A peak)  
0-300 V rms; 750 VA (425 V peak; 40 A peak)  
0-300 V rms; 1750 VA (425 V peak; 80 A peak)  
Capabilities  
Programmable ac voltage, dc voltage, frequency, phase, and current limit.  
Sine, square, clipped sine, and user-definable waveforms.  
Programmable output impedance.  
Voltage and frequency slew control.  
Synthesized waveform generation for high resolution and accuracy in frequency, low waveform  
distortion, and glitch-free phase transitions.  
Step and pulse output transients for generating surge, sag, dropout, and other line disturbance  
simulations.  
Nonvolatile list programming for generating complex output transients or test sequences.  
Nonvolatile state and waveform storage and recall.  
Extensive measurement capability:  
Ac rms, dc, ac+dc voltage and current and peak current.  
Real, reactive, and apparent power.  
Harmonic analysis of voltage and current waveforms gives amplitude, phase, and total  
harmonic distortion results up to the 50th harmonic.  
Triggered acquisition of digitized voltage and current with extensive post-acquisition  
calculations.  
All measurements made with 16-bit resolution.  
Trigger In and Trigger Out for synchronizing transient events or measurements with external  
signals.  
Front panel control with 14-character vacuum flourescent display, keypad, and rotary pulse  
generators for voltage and frequency settings.  
Built-in GPIB and RS-232 interface programming with SCPI command language.  
Over-voltage, over-power, over-current, over-temperature, and RI/DFI protection features.  
Built-in output and sense disconnect relays.  
Output terminals floating with respect to chassis ground.  
Extensive selftest, status reporting, and software calibration.  
Front Panel/Remote Operation  
The front panel has both rotary (RPG) and keypad controls for setting the output voltage and frequency.  
The panel display provides digital readouts of a number of output measurements. Annunciators display  
the operating status of the ac source. System keys let you perform system functions such as setting the  
GPIB address and recalling operating states. Front panel Function keys access the ac source function  
menus. Front panel Entry keys let you select and enter parameter values. Refer to Chapter 4 for a  
complete description of the front panel controls.  
14  
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General Information - 1  
Remotely programming is accomplished from either the GPIB bus or from an RS-232 serial port. GPIB  
and RS-232 programming uses SCPI commands (Standard Commands for Programmable Instruments)  
that make the ac source programs compatible with those of other instruments. AC source status registers  
permit remote monitoring of a wide variety of ac source operating conditions  
NOTE:  
Refer to the ac source Programming Guide for further information about remotely  
programming the ac source.  
Steady-state Output Characteristic  
The ac source’s steady-state output characteristic is shown in the following figure. Steady-state  
characteristics are defined as those output ratings that will be maintained by the ac source for an  
indefinite time. (The section "Peak Current Capability" describes the dynamic output capability of the  
unit.) The figure shows both the ac and the dc characteristics. With programmable output coupling, the ac  
source can supply dc as well as ac output voltages.  
Ac source operation is specified from 45 to 1000 Hz (see Appendix A). However, you can operate the  
unit at frequencies less that 45 Hz. The operating characteristics of the ac source at autput frequencies  
below 45 Hz are documented in Table A-3 of Appendix A.  
Vdc  
424 V  
285W (6811B)  
575W (6812B)  
1350W (6813B)  
Vrms  
115V (6811B/6812B)  
135V (6813B)  
375VA (6811B)  
300 V  
750VA (6812B)  
-2.5A (6811B)  
1750VA (6813B)  
-5A (6812B)  
Idc  
0
-Idc  
-10A (6813B)  
0.67A (6811B)  
1.35A (6812B)  
3.17A (6813B)  
2.5A (6811B)  
5A (6812B)  
10A (6813B)  
115V (6811B/6812B)  
135V (6813B)  
Irms  
0
1.25A (6811B)  
2.5A (6812B)  
5.8A (6813B)  
3.25A (6811B)  
6.5A (6812B)  
-424 V  
13A (6813B)  
-Vdc  
DC CHARACTERISTIC  
AC CHARACTERISTIC  
(45Hz - 1kHz sinewave)  
Figure 1-2. Steady-state Output Characteristic (in real-time mode)  
15  
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1 - General Information  
Peak Current/Dynamic Power Capability  
The ac source can generate peak currents that exceed the rms current capability of the unit. This not only  
applies when operating in ac mode, but also when programming output pulses in dc mode. Although the  
unit will generate peak output currents up to 40A (Agilent 6811B/6812B) or 80A (Agilent 6813B), the unit  
can only maintain this output for a limited time. If the output of the unit exceeds the limit of the safe  
operating area (SOA), the unit will activate its internal protection mode and turn its output off. This SOA  
limit is based on output voltage, output current, output duration, and heatsink temperature.  
NOTE:  
Refer to Chapter 4 on how to clear the unit when the internal protection mode has been  
activated.  
Peak Current Limit  
By programming the peak current limit, you can prevent the unit from exceeding the safe operating area,  
activating its internal protection mode, and turning the output off. The peak current limit circuit limits the  
instantaneous output current. It functions by reducing the instantaneous output voltage to keep the output  
peak current within the programmed limit. Because the circuit acts instantly, the effect is that it will clip  
the peaks of the output voltage waveform. Additionally, with fast and/or large voltage transitions, the  
unit may momentarily go into CC operating mode due to current in the output capacitor. This serves to  
limit the rate of change of output voltage.  
The following table gives approximate indications of how long the unit will tolerate peak output currents  
before the SOA limits are exceeded. Because these values are voltage dependent, the table includes  
various equivalent dc voltages along with the peak current values. The voltages shown in the table are  
NOT the programmed voltages, but the average voltage values that will appear at the output when the  
indicated high current condition exists. The SOA circuit becomes active at higher voltage and current  
values as well as at longer duration times.  
Table 1-3. Typical Peak Current Output Capacities  
Agilent  
6813B  
20 A  
Agilent 6811B  
Agilent 6812B  
10 A  
equivalent dc voltage when current is flowing1  
25  
75  
125  
190  
250  
360  
>100 ms >100 ms >100 ms >100 ms >100 ms >100 ms  
30 A  
40 A  
50 A  
60 A  
70 A  
80 A  
15 A  
20 A  
25 A  
30 A  
35 A  
40 A  
>100 ms 100 ms  
30 ms  
8.4 ms  
4.7 ms  
3.1 ms  
2.2 ms  
1.7 ms  
24 ms  
7.6 ms  
4.4 ms  
2.9 ms  
2.1 ms  
1.6 ms  
19 ms  
6.8 ms  
4 ms  
2.6 ms  
1.9 ms  
1.4 ms  
15 ms  
5.9 ms  
3.5 ms  
2.3 ms  
1.7 ms  
1.3 ms  
12 ms  
5.6 ms  
3.7 ms  
2.6 ms  
2 ms  
9.2 ms  
5.1 ms  
3.4 ms  
2.4 ms  
1.8 ms  
1Based on 25C ambient temperature, with heatsink temperature less than 50C.  
Peak Inrush Example  
The following table gives the recommended initial Ipeak settings when the ac source output is a 127 Vac or  
254 Vac 60 Hz sine wave, as a function of load capacitance. The load on the output is a full-wave bridge  
along with the indicated capacitor. The load resistance across the capacitor is infinite. The recommended  
Ipeak will change as a function of changes in input as follows:  
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General Information - 1  
as voltage increases, the Ipeak setting needs to be decreased.  
as frequency increases, the Ipeak setting can be increased.  
as load resistance decreases, the Ipeak setting needs to be decreased.  
Note that the purpose of programming the Ipeak current is to prevent the unit from activating its internal  
protection mode as a result of exceeding the SOA limits, and turning the output off. These initial settings  
may have to be reduced if the SOA circuit trips when the output is turned on. Sometimes trial and error  
must be used to arrive at the proper values of Ipeak  
.
Table 1-4. Recommended Ipeak Settings as a Function of Loop Capacitance  
I
peak setting  
Capacitance in µF  
127 V  
1100  
1200  
254 V  
500  
80 A  
60 A  
-
1700  
700  
50 A  
5000  
> 5000  
1000  
> 1000  
45 A  
< 45 A  
The following waveform illustrates the inrush current capability of the ac source. The peak current is  
limited during inrush in accord with table 1-3 to keep the ac source from turning its output off. Note that  
the output current waveform returns to its normal shape when the current drops below the peak current  
limit setting.  
VOLTAGE IS  
UNDISTORTED  
(115 Vrms)  
CURRENT  
WAVEFORM  
VOLTAGE  
WAVEFORM  
PEAK CURRENT  
< 45 A  
I PEAK=45A  
0
Figure 1-3. Peak Inrush Current Example  
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1 - General Information  
RMS Current Limit Circuit  
The output rms current limit is adjustable to any value within the range of the unit. If the load attempts  
to draw more current than the programmed limit, the output voltage is reduced to keep the rms current  
within the limit. When the output voltage is reduced, the waveform shape is preserved. In other words, all  
parts of the voltage cycle are reduced -- not just the peaks.  
NOTE:  
The speed at which the rms current circuit operates depends on the output voltage setting  
and the load impedance. The circuit responds more slowly at low output voltages and at  
high output impedances. With constant power or negative resistance loads, the rms  
current limit circuit causes the output voltage to go to zero.  
Voltage Regulation  
Real Time Regulation  
The default method of output regulation used by the ac source is real-time voltage regulation. Real-time  
voltage regulation tries to provide the actual programmed waveform at the output of the ac source. It  
offers the best overall programming response and fastest settling times. It does not have any limitations  
for waveforms and transients with frequency content below 45 Hz.  
RMS Regulation  
Rms voltage regulation assists real-time regulation to level out or stabilize the rms value of the ac  
component of the output voltage. Use rms voltage regulation in the following situations:  
If you experience load regulation effects with heavy loads.  
If you experience frequency regulation problems with heavy loads and you require flatter  
programming accuracy at higher frequencies.  
In conjunction with programmable output impedance, if you wish to maintain the rms level of  
output voltage as the source impedance is increases. (Refer to Output Impedance for more  
information.)  
The command to specify voltage regulation is VOLT:ALC:DET RTIM | RMS.  
NOTE: Do not use rms voltage regulation when operating at frequencies less than 45 Hz.  
Output Impedance  
You can program the real and/or reactive (resistive and/or inductive) part of the output impedance of the  
ac source. Inductive output impedances can be programmed in the range of 20 to 1000 microhenries.  
Resistive load impedances can be programmed in the range of 0 to 1 ohms.  
When programming output impedances, the lower your load impedance, the LESS programmed  
impedance you can use and still maintain output voltage stability. This applies particularly for load  
impedances less than 1 ohm.  
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General Information - 1  
CAUTION:  
Programming the ac source output impedance into a load with a low impedance can  
cause output voltage instability, which may damage the ac source. Stability MUST  
be maintained when operating the ac source with programmable resistance or  
inductance.  
To check for stability, monitor the output voltage with an oscilloscope. Instability exists  
if a 5kHz to 20kHz oscillation, which is dependent upon the ac source’s programmed  
inductance and the capacitance of the load, is present at any time during the following  
procedure.  
1. When programming inductance, it is recommended that you first add a series  
resistance either by programming the output resistance to 1 ohm or by adding an  
equivalent external resistor.  
2. Slowly program the inductance to the desired level while monitoring the output for  
any voltage instability. Do not proceed any further if the output shows any signs of  
instability.  
3. If less output resistance is required, slowly start lowering the resistance while  
monitoring the output for any voltage instability. Do not proceed any further if the  
output shows any signs of instability.  
If you cannot achieve satisfactory results with this procedure, disable the output  
impedance control and use an external impedance network.  
Rms voltage regulation can be used in conjunction with programmable output impedance to regulate the  
rms value of the ac component of the output voltage when programmed impedances cause distortion with  
nonlinear loads or reduced output voltage due to regulation effects.  
Note that real-time voltage regulation will permit the load current to cause output voltage degradation  
based on the programmed impedance and current drawn from the source, whereas rms regulation will  
reestablish the rms value at the programmed level.  
Output Coupling  
Ac output coupling mode mimics a transformer-coupled output, working to maintain zero average  
output voltage. This means that the output tries to remove any dc content on the output, whether the dc  
content is generated from a programmed offset or results from transients with dc content. The ac output  
coupling has a corner frequency of about 2 Hz, which will not prevent transient waveforms that may have  
short-term dc content, but will regulate the waveform back to an average value of zero volts in the steady  
state.  
Dc output coupling mode is used to generate dc offset voltages or output transients that have net dc  
components. In either mode of operation, the maximum voltage that the ac source can output is limited to  
425 V peak.  
The ac capability of the output is limited by VA (volt-amperes) rather than power (watts). The amount of  
VA available to a load can be determined by examining figure 1-2. Full output VA is available with no  
limitations except for the boundaries imposed by the maximum rms voltage of 300V, and the maximum  
rms current, which is model-dependent. Note that large peak power transients can be delivered by the ac  
source as earlier described under "Peak Current Capability"(Appendix A documents the ac source’s  
specifications and supplemental characteristics.)  
19  
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2
Installation  
Inspection  
Damage  
When you receive your ac source, inspect it for any obvious damage that may have occurred during  
shipment. If there is damage, notify the shipping carrier and the nearest Agilent Sales and Support Office  
immediately. The list of Agilent Sales and Support Offices is at the back of this guide. Warranty  
information is printed in the front of this guide.  
Packaging Material  
Until you have checked out the ac source, save the shipping carton and packing materials in case the unit  
has to be returned. If you return the ac source for service, attach a tag identifying the model number and  
the owner. Also include a brief description of the problem.  
Items Supplied  
Check that the following items are included with your ac source. Some items are installed in the unit.  
A power cord appropriate for your location. The cord may or may not be  
terminated in a power plug (see "Options" in Chapter 1). If the cord is not  
included, contact your nearest Agilent Sales and Support Office (refer to the  
list at the back of this guide).  
Power Cord  
4-terminal digital plug that connects to the back of the unit.  
Digital connector  
Safety covers  
Ac input cover with strain relief  
Ac output cover  
User’s Guide  
Manuals  
Programming Guide  
Quick Start Guide  
Quick Reference Card  
If applicable, change sheets may be included with this guide. If there are  
change sheets, make the indicated corrections in this guide.  
Change page  
Cleaning  
Use a dry cloth or one slightly dampened with water to clean the external case parts. Do not attempt to  
clean internally.  
WARNING:  
To prevent electric shock, unplug the unit before cleaning.  
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2 - Installation  
Location  
Refer to the Safety Summary page at the beginning of this manual for safety-related information about  
environmental conditions.  
CAUTION:  
Agilent 6811B/6812B units weigh 28.2 kg (62 lbs).  
Agilent 6813B units weigh 32.7 kg (72 lbs).  
Obtain adequate help when moving or mounting the unit in the rack.  
Bench Operation  
The outline diagram in figure 2-1 gives the dimensions of your ac source. The feet may be removed for  
rack mounting. Your ac source must be installed in a location that allows sufficient space at the sides and  
back of the unit for adequate air circulation. Minimum clearances are 1 inch (25 mm) along the sides. Do  
not block the fan exhaust at the rear of the unit.  
Rack Mounting  
The ac source can be mounted in a standard 19-inch rack panel or cabinet. Rack mounting kits are  
available as Option 1CM or 1CP. Installation instructions are included with each rack mounting kit.  
Agilent ac sources also require instrument support rails in addition to the rack mount kit. Support  
rails are normally ordered with the cabinet and are not included with the rack mounting kits.  
TO P  
REAR  
425.5m m  
16.75"  
12.7m m  
0.5"  
574.7m m  
22.6"  
128m m  
5.04"  
132.6m m  
5.25"  
50.8m m  
2.0"  
SIDE  
Figure 2-1. Outline Diagram  
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Installation - 2  
Input Connections  
Input Source and Line Fuse  
You can operate your ac source from a single-phase ac power source as indicated on the rear panel Line  
Rating label. See "ac Input Voltage Range" in Table A-2 of Appendix A for details.  
NOTE:  
The power ac source must be on a dedicated line with no other devices consuming  
current from it.  
The line fuse is located inside the ac source. Refer to "In case of Trouble" in Chapter 3 for instructions  
on fuse replacement.  
Installing the Power Cord  
The power cord supplied with the ac source may or may not include a power plug at one end of the cord.  
Figure 2-2 shows the various power plugs. Terminating connections are attached to the other end of the  
cord.  
Figure 2-2. Power Cord Plug Configurations  
WARNING: Installation of the power cord must be done by a qualified and licensed electrician  
and must be in accordance with local electrical codes.  
See Figure 2-3 while performing the following procedure.  
a.  
If they are not already in place, position the strain relief connector (9), safety cover (5), rubber  
boot (8) and connector nut (7) on the power cord (6).  
b.  
c.  
d.  
e.  
Secure the ground wire (2) to the chassis earth ground stud.  
Connect the neutral wire (1) to the N power input terminal.  
Connect the line (3) to the L1 power input terminal.  
Position the safety cover over the power input terminals and tighten the cover and strain relief  
connector screws.  
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2 - Installation  
L1  
L2(N)  
1. GROUND CONNECTION (GRN/YEL OR GRN)  
2. LINE CONNECTION (BROWN OR BLACK)  
3. NEUTRAL CONNECTION (BLUE OR WHITE)  
4. POWER CORD  
1
2
6
7
8
5. CONNECTOR NUT  
3
4
6. RUBBER BOOT  
7. POWER SAFETY COVER  
8. STRAIN RELIEF CONNECTOR  
5
Figure 2-3. Connecting the Power Cord  
Output Connections  
The power output terminal block has a floating output terminal connection and a floating neutral line for  
the return connection. A separate earth ground terminal is located on the extreme right of the terminal  
block.  
!
SENSE  
01  
01  
COM  
COM  
300 VAC MAX TO  
01 PHASE 1 OUTPUT CONNECTION  
COM PHASE RETURN CONNECTION  
GROUND CONNECTION  
Figure 2-4. Output Connections  
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Installation - 2  
Wire Considerations  
NOTE:  
To minimize the possibility of instability on the output, keep load leads as short as  
possible bundle or twist the leads tightly together to minimize inductance  
Current Ratings  
Fire Hazard To satisfy safety requirements, load wires must be large enough not to overheat  
when carrying the maximum short-circuit current of the ac source. If there is more  
than one load, then any pair of load wires must be capable of safely carrying the  
full-rated current of the ac source.  
Table 2-1 lists the characteristics of AWG (American Wire Gage) copper wire.  
Table 2-1. Ampacity and Resistance of Stranded Copper Conductors  
AWG No.  
Ampacity1  
Resistance2  
AWG No.  
Ampacity1  
Resistance2  
(/m)  
(/m)  
14  
12  
10  
8
25  
30  
40  
60  
0.0103  
0.0065  
0.0041  
0.0025  
6
4
80  
0.0016  
105  
140  
195  
0.0010  
2
0.00064  
0.00040  
1/0  
NOTES:  
1. Ampacity is based on 30°C ambient temperature with conductor rated at 60°C. For ambient  
temperature other than 30°C, multiply the above ampacities by the following constants:  
Constant  
Temp. (°C)  
21-25  
Temp. (°C)  
41-45  
Temp. (°C)  
0.71  
1.08  
26-30  
1.00  
46-50  
0.58  
31-35  
0.91  
51-55  
0.41  
36-40  
0.82  
2. Resistance is nominal at 75 °C wire temperature.  
Voltage Drops  
The load wires must also be large enough to avoid excessive voltage drops due to the impedance of the  
wires. In general, if the wires are heavy enough to carry the maximum short circuit current without  
overheating, excessive voltage drops will not be a problem. Refer to Table 2-1 to calculate the voltage  
drop for some commonly used AWG copper wire. If load regulation becomes a problem refer to the  
section "Remote Sense Connections".  
Remote Sense Connections  
Under normal operation, the ac source senses the output voltage at the output terminals on the back of the  
unit. External sense terminals are available on the back of the unit that allow the output voltages to be  
sensed at the load, compensating for impedance losses in the load wiring. As shown in the following  
figure:  
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2 - Installation  
Connect the phase 1 (1) sense terminals to the side of the load that connects to the corresponding  
output terminal.  
Connect the Neutral (COM) sense terminal connector to the neutral side of the load.  
Twist and shield all signal wires to and from the sense connectors.  
The sense leads are part of the ac source’s feedback path and must be kept at a low resistance in order to  
maintain optimal performance. Connect the sense leads carefully so that they do not become open-  
circuited.  
CAUTION:  
If the sense leads are left unconnected or become open during operation, the ac source  
will regulate at the output terminals, but with a 40% increase in output voltage over the  
programmed limit. The meter circuit cannot read back this increase in output voltage  
when the sense lead is disconnected.  
Set the ALC command to EXT (external) to enable remote sensing. The ALC command is located under  
the Voltage key as explained in Chapter 4. Set the ALC command to INT (internal) to disable remote  
sensing.  
NOTE:  
If you are using external relays to connect and disconnect the load and sense  
connections, do NOT permit the sense connections to open when remote sensing is  
enabled. First disable remote sensing, then open the sense and load connections.  
!
SENSE  
01  
01  
COM  
COM  
LOAD  
Figure 2-5. Remote Sense Connections  
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Installation - 2  
Remote Sensing and OVP Considerations  
In remote sense applications, the voltage drop in the load leads subtracts from the available load voltage  
(see "Remote Sensing Capability" in appendix A). As the ac source increases its output to overcome this  
voltage drop, the sum of the programmed voltage and the load-lead drop may exceed the ac source’s  
maximum voltage rating. This may trip the OV protection circuit, which senses the voltage at the output  
terminals, not at the load. When using remote sensing, you must program the OVP trip voltage high  
enough to compensate for the voltage drop between the output terminals and the load.  
NOTE:  
If the load causes the peak current limit circuit to become active, voltage transitions on  
the output may cause nuisance tripping of the OVP circuit.  
Trigger Connections  
The BNC trigger connectors on the rear panel let you apply trigger signals to the ac source as well as  
generate trigger signals from the ac source. The electrical characteristics of the trigger connectors are  
described in appendix A. More information on programming external triggers is found in Chapter 4 of  
the ac source Programming Guide.  
Trigger IN  
Allows negative-going external trigger signals to trigger the ac source.  
Trigger OUT  
Generates a negative-going pulse when the selected transient output has occurred.  
Digital Connections  
This connector, which is on the rear panel, is for connecting the fault and the inhibit signals. The fault  
(FLT) signal is also referred to as the DFI signal in the front panel and SCPI commands. The inhibit  
(INH) signal is also referred to as the RI signal in the front panel and SCPI commands.  
The connector accepts wires sizes from AWG 22 to AWG 12. Disconnect the mating plug to make your  
wire connections. The electrical characteristics of the digital connectors are described in appendix A.  
More information on programming the digital connectors is found in Chapter 4 of the ac source  
Programming Guide.  
NOTE:  
It is good engineering practice to twist and shield all signal wires to and from the digital  
connectors  
The following examples show how you can connect the FLT/INH circuits of the ac source.  
In example A, the INH input connects to a switch that shorts pin + to pin whenever it is necessary to  
disable output of the unit. This activates the remote inhibit (RI) circuit, which turns off the ac output. The  
front panel Prot annunciator comes on and the RI bit is set in the Questionable Status Event register. To  
re-enable the unit, first open the connection between pins + and and then clear the protection circuit.  
This can be done either from the front panel or over the GPIB/RS-232.  
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2 - Installation  
In example B, the FLT output of one unit is connected to the INH input of another unit. A fault condition  
in one of the units will disable all of them without intervention either by the controller or external  
circuitry. The controller can be made aware of the fault via a service request (SRQ) generated by the  
Questionable Status summary bit.  
FLT INH  
I
-
+
-
+
. . . .  
I
-
+
-
+
NOTE: Connectors  
are removable  
FLT Output  
FLT INH  
I
-
+
-
+
INH Input  
. . . .  
I
-
+
-
+
I
-
+
-
+
INH Common  
INH Input  
Switch  
(Normally  
Open)  
INH Input  
FLT Output  
B) FLT Example with Multiple Units  
A) INH Example with One Unit  
Figure 2-6. FLT/INH Examples  
Controller Connections  
The ac source connects to a controller either through a GPIB or an RS-232 connector.  
GPIB Connector  
Each ac source has its own GPIB bus address. AC sources may be connected to the bus in series  
configuration, star configuration, or a combination of the two. You may connect from 1 to 15 ac sources  
to a controller GPIB interface.  
NOTE:  
28  
The ac source is shipped from the factory with its GPIB address set to 5. This address  
can be changed as described in Chapter 4 of this guide.  
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Installation - 2  
RS-232 Interface  
The ac source provides an RS-232 programming interface, which is activated by commands located under  
the front panel Address key. When the RS-232 interface is selected, the GPIB interface is disabled.  
NOTE:  
Sending or receiving data over the RS-232 interface when not configured for REMOTE  
operation can cause unpredictable results. Always make sure the ac source is configured  
for remote operation when using the RS-232 interface.  
Interface Commands  
All SCPI commands are available through RS-232 programming. The SYSTem:LOCal,  
SYSTem:REMote, and SYSTem:RWLock commands are only available through the RS-232 interface.  
SYSTem:LOCal  
SYSTem:REMote  
SYSTem:RWLock  
Places the ac source in local mode during RS-232 operation.The front panel keys  
are functional.  
Places the ac source in remote mode during RS-232 operation. All front panel  
keys except the LOCAL key are disabled.  
Places the ac source in remote mode during RS-232 operation. All front panel  
keys including the LOCAL key are disabled.  
RS-232 Data Format  
constant 11-bit data format  
one start bit  
seven data bits plus a parity bit (even or odd parity), or eight data bits without parity (parity bit is  
"0")  
two stop bits  
You can specify one of the following baud rates: 300 600 1200 2400 4800 9600  
NOTE:  
The ac source always uses one start bit and two stop bits regardless of the baud rate. The  
number of start and stop bits is not programmable.  
RS-232 Connector  
The RS-232 connector is a DB-9, male connector. You can connect the ac source to any computer or  
terminal with a properly configured DB-25 connector. You can use a standard Agilent 24542G or 24542H  
interface cable.  
Table 2-2. RS-232 Connector  
Pin  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Input/Output  
Output  
Description  
1 2 3 4 5  
Reserved for service use  
Receive Data (RxD)  
Transmit Data (TxD)  
Data Terminal Ready (DTR)  
Signal ground  
Input  
Output  
Output  
Common  
Input  
Data Set Ready (DSR)  
no connection  
6 7 8 9  
8
no connection  
9
Output  
Reserved for service use  
29  
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2 - Installation  
Hardware Handshake  
The RS-232 interface uses the DTR (data terminal ready) line as a holdoff signal to the bus controller.  
When DTR is true, the bus controller may send data to the ac source. When DTR goes false, the bus  
controller must stop sending data within 10 characters, and must not send any more data until DTR goes  
true again. The ac source sets DTR false under two conditions.  
1.  
When the input buffer is full (approximately 100 characters have been received), it will set DTR  
false. When enough characters have been removed to make space in the input buffer, DTR will  
be set to true, unless condition 2 (see below) prevents this.  
2.  
When the ac source wants to "talk", which means that it has processed a query, and has seen a  
<newline> message terminator, it will set DTR false. This implies that once a query has been  
sent to the power source, the bus controller should read the response before attempting to send  
more data. It also means that a <newline> must terminate the command string. After the response  
has been output, the ac source will set DTR true again, unless condition #1 prevents this.  
The ac source monitors the DSR (data set ready) line to determine when the bus controller is ready to  
accept data. It checks this line before each character is sent, and the output is suspended if DSR is false.  
When DSR goes true, transmission will resume. The ac source will leave DTR false while output is  
suspended. A form of deadlock exists until the bus controller asserts DSR true to allow the ac source to  
complete the transmission.  
Control-C is the equivalent to the GPIB device clear command. It clears the operation in progress and  
discards any pending output. For the control-C character to be recognized by the power source while it  
holds DTR false, the bus controller must first set DSR false.  
Null modem RS-232 interface cables swap the DTR and DSR lines as shown in the following figure. For  
other bus controllers or languages, you must determine what form of hardware handshake is used. You  
may have to build a customized cable to connect the holdoff lines as necessary. If your bus controller  
does not use hardware handshaking, tie the DSR input to the ac source to a signal that is always true.  
This implies that your bus controller must always be ready to accept data. You may want to set the baud  
rate to either 2400 or 4800 baud to ensure that this is true.  
bus controller  
ac source  
TxD (3)  
RxD (2)  
TxD (3)  
RxD (2)  
DTR (4)  
*DTR (4)  
*DSR (6)  
DSR (6)  
Ground (5)  
Ground (5)  
Figure 2-7. Null Modem Interface Lines  
Response Data Terminator  
All RS-232 response data sent by the ac source is terminated by the ASCII character pair <carriage  
return><newline>. This differs from GPIB response data which is terminated by the single character  
<newline>.  
30  
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3
Turn-On Checkout  
Introduction  
Successful tests in this chapter provide a high degree of confidence that the ac source is operating  
properly. For verification tests, see appendix B. Complete performance tests are given in the Service  
Guide.  
NOTE:  
This chapter provides a preliminary introduction to the ac source front panel. See  
Chapter 4 for more details.  
Preliminary Checkout  
WARNING: LETHAL VOLTAGES. Ac sources can supply 425 V peak at their output. DEATH  
on contact may result if the output terminals or circuits connected to the output are  
touched when power is applied.  
1.  
2.  
3.  
If you have not already done so, connect the power cord to the ac source and plug it in.  
Turn the front panel power switch to ON (1).  
The ac source undergoes a self-test when you turn it on. The following items appear on the  
display:  
a. A brief pattern that lights all display segments, followed by the model number and the  
software revision number.  
b. The display then goes into the meter mode with the Dis annunciator on, and all others off.  
"Meter mode" means that the VOLTS digits indicate the output voltage and the FREQ digits  
indicate the output frequency. The voltage will be at or near zero and the frequency will be at 60  
Hertz.  
Note: If the ac source detects an error during self-test, the Err anunciator on the display will be  
lit. Pressing the Shift and Error keys will show the error number. Go to "In Case of Trouble" at  
the end of this chapter.  
4.  
Check that the ac source fan is on. You should be able to hear the fan and feel the air coming  
from the unit.  
5.  
6.  
Press Output on/off once. The Dis annunciator will go off and the CV annunciator will go on.  
Turn the unit off.  
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3 - Turn-On Checkout  
Using the Keypad  
(shift)  
Some of the front panel keys perform two functions, one labeled in black and  
the other in blue. You access the blue function by first pressing the blue  
shift key. Release the key after you press it. The Shift annunciator will be on,  
indicating that you have access to any key’s shifted function.  
and  
and  
These keys let you scroll up and down through the choices in the presently  
selected function menu. All menu lists are circular; you can return to the  
starting position by continuously pressing either key.  
These keys let you select the previous or the next parameter for a specific  
command. If the command has a numeric range, these keys increment or  
decrement the existing value.  
É
The backspace key is an erase key. If you make a mistake entering a digit and  
have not yet pressed Enter, you can delete the digit by pressing -. Delete  
more digits by repeatedly pressing this key.  
Enter  
Executes the entered value or parameter of the presently accessed command.  
Until you press this key, the parameters you enter with the other keys are  
displayed but not entered into the ac source. After pressing Enter, the ac  
source returns to Meter mode in most cases. In Harmonic or List mode, the ac  
source displays the next point in the list.  
Checkout Procedure  
WARNING: LETHAL VOLTAGES. Ac sources can supply 425 V peak at their output. DEATH  
on contact may result if the output terminals or circuits connected to the output are  
touched when power is applied.  
The output test requires that you connect light bulbs to the output of the unit and apply a  
potentially hazardous voltage of 120 Vac. Properly shield all connections and wires.  
The test in this section checks for output voltage and current on the ac source by having you connect light  
bulbs to the output of the unit. The following equipment is recommended for performing this output  
checkout procedure:  
1 - 100 W light bulb  
1 - light bulb socket  
wires for connecting socket to the unit  
NOTE:  
When the ac source is turned on as shipped from the factory, it asserts the *RST state.  
You can subsequently program the unit to turn on according to the state stored in *RCL  
location 0, as explained in Chapter 4. The following procedures assume that the unit  
turns on in the *RST state.  
Make sure that the unit is turned off, and make the following connections to the output.  
32  
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Turn-On Checkout - 3  
!
SENSE  
01  
01  
COM  
COM  
100 W  
Figure 3-1.Verification Connections  
Procedure  
Display  
Explanation  
1.  
Turn the unit on.  
Meter mode  
Meter mode is active and the Dis annunciator  
should be on.  
2.  
3.  
VOLT 0.00  
VOLT 120  
Display indicates the default settings.  
Press the Voltage key.  
Press 1, 2, 0, Enter  
Programs the output voltage to 120 Vrms. After  
the value is entered, the display returns to Meter  
mode, which indicates that no voltage is applied to  
the output.  
4.  
120 V 60 Hz  
PROT:CLEAR  
Turns the output on and applies 120 volts to the  
light bulb. The Dis annunciator should be off and  
CV should be on.  
Press Output On/Off  
Press Protect  
5.  
6.  
Display accesses the protection menu list.  
Press  or ô and  
scroll to the  
VOLT:PROT 500 Display shows the overvoltage protection trip  
voltage for your unit. The overvoltage protection  
VOLT:PROT item  
voltage is programmed in peak, not rms volts.  
7.  
VOLT:PROT 160 Programs the OVP to 160 Vpeak, the rms value of  
which is less than the previously set rms voltage.  
Press 1, 6, 0, Enter  
0 V 60 Hz  
Because the peak OVP voltage entered was less  
than the rms output voltage, the OVP circuit  
tripped. The output dropped to zero, CV turned  
off, and Prot turned on.  
8.  
9.  
VOLT:PROT 320 Programs the OVP to a peak value that is greater  
than the rms output voltage value.  
Press Protect, scroll  
to the VOLT:PROT  
item, and press 3, 2, 0,  
Enter  
Note: You cannot clear an OVP trip until you  
have first removed the cause of the condition.  
120 V 60 Hz  
Executes the PROT:CLEAR command, restoring  
Press Protect, and  
the output. Prot turns off and CV turns on.  
Enter  
33  
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3 - Turn-On Checkout  
Procedure  
Display  
Explanation  
10. Press Shift, and  
CURR:LEV 5  
Indicates the default output current limit setting.  
Current  
11.  
CURR:LEV .5  
Press . 5 Enter  
Sets the current limit to .5 amperes. The CC  
annunciator is on, indicating that the unit is in  
current limit mode and the light bulbs are dimmer  
because the output voltage has dropped in its  
attempt to limit output current.  
12. Press Protect, scroll to CURR:PROT ON You have enabled the overcurrent protection  
the CURR:PROT item,  
and press ° to select  
ON. Then press Enter.  
circuit. The circuit then tripped because of the  
output short. The CC annunciator turns off and  
the OCP and Prot annuciators come on. The  
output current is near zero.  
13. Press Output On/Off  
0.5 V 60 Hz  
The output is off and the Dis annunciator turns on.  
14. Press Protect, scroll to CURR:PROT OFF You have disabled the overcurrent protection  
the CURR:PROT item,  
press ° to select OFF,  
then press Enter.  
circuit. The Prot annunciator turns off.  
15. Turn the unit off.  
The next time the unit turns on it will be restored  
to the *RST or factory default state  
In Case of Trouble  
Error Messages  
Ac source failure may occur during power-on selftest or during operation. In either case, the display may  
show an error message that indicates the reason for the failure.  
Selftest Errors  
Pressing the Shift and Error keys will show the error number. Selftest error messages appear as:  
ERROR <n>, where "n" is a number listed in the following table. If this occurs, turn the power off and  
then back on to see if the error persists. If the error message persists, the ac source requires service.  
Table 3-1. Power-On Selftest Errors  
Error No.  
Error 0  
Failed Test  
No error  
Error 1  
Non-volatile RAM RD0 section checksum failed  
Non-volatile RAM CONFIG section checksum failed  
Non-volatile RAM CAL section checksum failed  
Non-volatile RAM WAVEFORM section checksum failed  
Non-volatile RAM STATE section checksum failed  
Non-volatile RAM LIST section checksum failed  
RAM selftest  
Error 2  
Error 3  
Error 4  
Error 5  
Error 6  
Error 10  
Error 11 to 18  
DAC selftest 1 to 8  
34  
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Turn-On Checkout - 3  
Runtime Error Messages  
Under unusual operating conditions, the front panel display may show OVLD. This indicates that the  
output voltage or current is beyond the range of the meter readback circuit. If the front panel display  
indicates -- -- -- -- -- -- , a GPIB measurement is in progress. Appendix C lists other error messages that  
may appear at runtime.  
Line Fuse  
If the ac source appears "dead" with a blank display and the fan not running, first check your power  
source to be certain line voltage is being supplied to the ac source. If the power source is normal, the ac  
source line fuse may be defective. If the ac source has a defective fuse, replace it only once. If it fails  
again, investigate the reason for the failure. Proceed as follows:  
WARNING: Hazardous voltages can remain active inside the ac source even after it has been  
turned off. Fuse replacement should be done only by a qualified electronics  
technician.  
The line fuse is located inside the ac source. To change it, refer to Figure 3-2 and proceed as follows:  
1.  
2.  
Turn off the front panel power switch and unplug the line cord from the ac source.  
Remove the ac cover as follows:  
a. Remove the four screws securing the carrying straps and dustcover (use a T25 Torx drive).  
b. Spread the bottom rear of the cover and pull it back to remove it.  
3.  
Observe the two LEDs on each side of the unit. If either LED is ON, there is still hazardous  
voltages present inside the ac source. Wait until the LEDs are out before proceeding (it may take  
several minutes for the LEDs to go out.)  
4.  
5.  
6.  
7.  
Replace the fuse with one of the same type. Do not use a slow-blow type fuse  
Replace the cover.  
Connect the line cord to the ac source.  
Turn on power and verify operation.  
SIDE VIEW (WITH COVER REMOVED)  
LED  
FUSE  
Figure 3-2. AC Source Fuse Location  
35  
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4
Front panel Operation  
Introduction  
Here is what you will find in this chapter:  
a complete description of the front panel controls  
front panel programming examples that describe:  
how to program the output voltage and frequency  
how to measure the output  
how to program the output pulses and lists  
how to trigger output changes  
Front Panel Description  
1
2
5
6
7
300  
V
/
rms 50 VA  
1
6812A  
AC POWER SOURCE  
ANALYZER  
SYSTEM  
Local  
FUNCTION  
Current  
ENTRY  
Harmonic  
Index  
Index  
Calibration  
Meter  
Voltage  
7
8
5
2
9
1
METER  
OUTPUT  
115.0V 60.0HZ  
Error  
Output  
Input  
Phase  
Freq  
Address  
CV CC CR CP Unr Dis Tran OCP Prot Cal Shift Rmt Addr Err SRQ  
6
3
4
Status  
Save  
Shape  
Recall  
Protect  
Phase  
Select  
Enter  
1
VOLTAGE  
FREQUENCY  
List  
Trigger  
E
Clear Entry  
-
Output  
on/off  
Trigger  
Control  
Pulse  
.
0
LINE  
On  
Off  
4
3
Figure 4-1. Front Panel, Overall View  
37  
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4 - Front Panel Operation  
14-character vacuum fluorescent display for showing programmed commands  
and measured values.  
j Display  
Annunciators light to indicate operating modes and status conditions:  
k Annunciators  
φ1  
Phase 1 is being controlled or metered.  
CV The ac source output is in constant-voltage mode.  
CC The ac source output is in constant-current mode.  
Unr The ac source output is in an unregulated state.  
Dis  
The ac source output is disabled (off).  
Tran The ac source output is initialized to output a transient.  
OCP The overcurrent protection state is enabled.  
Prot One of the ac source’s output protection features is activated.  
Cal  
The ac source is in calibration mode.  
Shift The Shift key is pressed to access an alternate key function.  
Rmt The selected interface (GPIB or RS-232) is in a remote state.  
Addr The interface is addressed to talk or to listen.  
Err There is a message in the SCPI error queue.  
SRQ The interface is requesting service from the controller.  
Meter Front panel measurement functions are: ac only, dc only, or ac+dc  
AC+DC  
Output The ac source output coupling is: ac only, or ac+dc  
AC+DC  
The rotary pulse generators let you set the output voltage and frequency when the  
ac source is in local mode. Their response is rate sensitive.  
l Voltage/  
Frequency  
Turning a control rapidly provides coarse control of the value.  
Turning a control slowly provides fine control of the value.  
This turns the ac source on or off.  
n Line  
The system keys let you:  
o System Keys  
Return to Local mode (front panel control)  
Set the ac source GPIB address  
Set the RS-232 interface communication baud rate and parity bit  
Display SCPI error codes and clear the error queue  
Save and recall up to 4 instrument operating configurations  
Function access command menus that let you:  
Program output voltage, current limit, frequency, and output waveforms  
Turn the ouput on and off  
p Function Keys  
Select metering functions  
Send immediate triggers from the front panel  
Program transient output functions  
Set and clear protection functions  
Select output phases  
Select the coupling for output and meter functions  
Monitor instrument status  
Entry keys let you:  
q Entry Keys  
Enter programming values  
Increment or decrement programming values  
Calibrate the ac source  
38  
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Front Panel Operation - 4  
System Keys  
Refer to the examples later in this chapter for more details on the use of these keys.  
SYSTEM  
Local  
Error  
Address  
Save  
Recall  
Figure 4-2. System Keys  
Shift  
This is the blue, unlabeled key, which is also shown as  
in this guide.  
Pressing this key accesses the alternate or shifted function of a key (such as  
ERROR ). Release the key after you press it. The Shift annunciator is lit,  
indicating that the shifted keys are active.  
Local  
Press to change the ac source’s selected interface from remote operation to local  
(front panel) operation. Pressing the key will have no effect if the interface state  
is already Local, Local-with-Lockout, or Remote-with-Lockout.  
Address  
Press to access the system address menu. This menu lets you configure the ac  
source’s interface. Address Menu entries are stored in non-volatile memory.  
Display  
ADDRESS <value>  
Command Function  
Sets the GPIB Address  
INTF <char>  
Selects an interface (GPIB or RS232)  
BAUDRATE<value> Selects baud rate (300, 600, 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600)  
PARITY <char>  
LANG <char>  
Message parity (NONE, EVEN, ODD, MARK, SPACE)  
Selects language (SCPI or E9012)  
value = a numeric value  
char = a character string parameter  
Use  
Use  
and  
and  
to scroll through the command list.  
to scroll through the parameter list.  
Recall  
Shift  
Press to place the ac source into a previously stored state. You can recall up to  
16 (0 through 15) previously stored states.  
Error  
Save  
Press to display the system error codes stored in the SCPI error queue. This  
action also clears the queue. If there is no error in the queue, 0 is displayed.  
Shift  
Press to store an existing ac source state in non-volatile memory. The parameters  
saved are listed under *SAV in the ac source Programming Guide. You can  
save up to 16 states (0 through 15).  
39  
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4 - Front Panel Operation  
Function Keys  
Refer to the examples later in this chapter for more details on the use of these keys.  
FUNCTION  
Harmonic  
Meter  
Current  
Index  
Voltage  
Phase  
Freq  
Output  
Input  
Index  
Status  
Shape  
Phase  
Protect  
Select  
List  
Trigger  
Output  
on/off  
Trigger  
Control  
Pulse  
Figure 4-3. Function Keys  
Immediate Action Keys  
Immediate action keys immediately execute their corresponding function when pressed. Other function  
keys have commands underneath them that are accessed when the key is pressed.  
Output  
On/Off  
This key toggles the output of the ac source between the on and off states. It  
immediately executes its function as soon as you press it. When off, the ac  
source output is disabled and the Dis annunciator is on.  
Phase  
Select  
This key only applies to three-phase ac sources  
Shift  
Trigger  
Sends an immediate trigger to the ac source  
Scrolling Keys  
Scrolling keys let you move through the commands in the presently selected function menu.  
These scroll keys let you move through the choices in a command list.  
Press  
to bring up the next command in the list. Press  
to go back  
to the previous command in the list. Function menus are circular; you can  
return to the starting position by continuously pressing either key. The  
following example shows the commands in the Input function menu:  
Shift  
Shift  
Index  
Index  
These shifted scroll keys apply only to the Harmonic and List functions.  
Press these keys to step through integers 0 through 50 when specifying the  
desired harmonic number, or 0 through 99 when specifying the desired list  
point. Hold down these keys to rapidly access any harmonic or list point.  
¯
°
These Entry keys let you scroll through choices in a parameter list that apply  
to a specific command. Parameter lists are circular; you can return to the  
starting position by continuously pressing either key. If the command has a  
numeric range, these keys increment or decrement the existing value.  
40  
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Front Panel Operation - 4  
Meter Display Keys  
Metering keys control the metering functions of the ac source.  
Meter  
Press this key to access the meter menu list.  
Display  
Measurement  
<reading>V <reading>Hz  
<reading>V <reading>A  
<reading>A <reading>Hz  
<reading>V <reading>W  
<reading> CREST F  
<reading>A PK REP  
<reading>A PK NR  
<reading> VA  
rms voltage and frequency (the default)  
rms voltage and rms current  
rms current and frequency (the default)  
rms voltage and power  
current crest factor  
peak current, repetitive  
peak current, nonrepetitive1  
apparent power  
<reading> VAR  
reactive power  
<reading> PFACTOR  
power factor  
Input  
Press this key to specify the following metering functions.  
Display  
INP:COUP <char>  
CURR:RANGE <char>  
Command Function  
Choose meter coupling (AC, DC or ACDC)  
Current measurement range (HIGH or LOW)  
HIGH = for measuring rms currents > 5.7 A  
LOW = for measuring rms currents < 5.7 A  
Select harmonic measurement window meter  
(KBESSEL, RECT)  
WINDOW <char>  
Shift  
Harmonic  
Press this key to access the harmonic menu list  
Display  
Measurement  
current harmonic magnitude  
current harmonic phase  
voltage harmonic magnitude  
voltage harmonic phase  
neutral current harmonic magnitude  
neutral current harmonic phase  
current total % harmonic distortion  
voltage total % harmonic distortion  
<reading>A I:MAG: <index>  
<reading>° I:PHASE: <index>  
<reading>V V:MAG: <index>  
<reading>° V:PHASE: <index>  
<reading> N:MAG: <index>  
<reading>° N:PHASE: <index>  
<reading>° CURR:THD  
<reading>° VOLT:THD  
Notes:  
1Displays the highest peak current since it was last cleared.The value is cleared when  
Enter  
Clear Entry  
you scroll into this selection or press  
reading = the returned measurement  
or  
index = a numeric value that represents the harmonic number from 0 to 50  
char = a character string parameter  
and  
and  
scroll through the command list.  
scroll through the parameter list.  
Index  
Index  
and  
specify the desired harmonic.  
41  
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4 - Front Panel Operation  
Output Control Keys  
Output control keys control the output functions of the ac source.  
Voltage  
Press this key to access the voltage menu list.  
Display  
Command Function  
Set immediate rms output voltage  
Set triggered rms output voltage  
Select the voltage mode (FIXED, STEP, PULSE or LIST)  
Set immediate dc offset voltage  
Set triggered dc offset voltage  
Select the dc offset voltage mode (FIXED, STEP, PULSE  
or LIST)  
VOLT <value>  
VOLT:T<value>  
VOLT:M <char>  
OFFSET <value>  
OFFSET:T<value>  
OFFSET:M <char>  
SLEW <value>  
SLEW:T<value>  
SLEW:M <char>  
Set immediate voltage slew rate in volts/second  
Set triggered voltage slew rate in volts/second  
Select the voltage slew mode (FIXED, STEP, PULSE or  
LIST)  
OFF:SLW <value>  
OFF:SLW:T<value>  
OFF:SLW:M <char>  
Set immediate dc offset voltage slew in volts/second  
Set triggered dc offset voltage slew in volts/second  
Select the dc offset voltage slew mode (FIXED, STEP,  
PULSE or LIST)  
ALC <char>  
ALC:DET <char>  
Select the voltage sense source (INT or EXT)  
Select the voltage sense detector (RTIME or RMS)  
Shift  
Current  
Press this key to access the current menu list.  
Display  
Command Function  
CURR:LEV <value>  
CURR:PEAK <value>  
CURR:PEAK:T <value>  
Set immediate rms output current limit  
Set immediate peak output current limit  
Set triggered peak output current limit  
CURR:PEAK:M <value> Select the peak output current limit mode (FIXED, STEP,  
PULSE or LIST)  
Freq  
Press this key to access the frequency menu list.  
Display  
Command Function  
Set immediate output frequency  
Set triggered output frequency  
Select the frequency mode (FIXED, STEP, PULSE or  
LIST)  
FREQ <value>  
FREQ:T<value>  
FREQ:M <char>  
SLEW <value>  
SLEW:T<value>  
SLEW:M <char>  
Set immediate frequency slew rate in volts/second  
Set triggered frequency slew rate in volts/second  
Select the frequency slew mode (FIXED, STEP, PULSE or  
LIST)  
Notes:  
value = a numeric value  
char = a character string parameter  
and  
and  
scroll through the command list.  
scroll through the parameter list.  
42  
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Front Panel Operation - 4  
Shift  
Phase  
Press this key to access the phase menu list.  
Display  
Command Function  
Set immediate output phase  
Set triggered output phase  
PHASE <value>  
PHASE:T <value>  
PHASE:M <char>  
Select the phase mode (FIXED, STEP, PULSE or LIST)  
Shape  
Press this key to access the shape menu list.  
Display  
SHAPE <char>  
Command Function  
Select the immediate output wave shape (SINE,  
SQUARE, or CSINE) CSIN = clipped sine wave  
Select the triggered output wave shape (SINE, SQUARE,  
or CSINE) CSIN = clipped sine wave  
SHAPE:T <char>  
SHAPE:M <char>  
CLIP <value>  
Select the shape mode (FIXED, STEP, PULSE or LIST)  
Set the clipping level of the CSIN wave shape. This  
specifies the point where clipping starts as a percentage of  
the peak amplitude or percentage of THD.  
Pulse  
Press this key to access the pulse menu list.  
Display  
Command Function  
Set the pulse width  
Set the number of output pulses  
Set the pulse duty cycle as a percentage of the pulse period  
Set the pulse period  
WIDTH <value>  
COUNT <value>  
DCYCLE <value>  
PER <value>  
HOLD <char>  
Set the parameter that will be held constant as the other  
parameters change (WIDTH or DCYCLE)  
Shift  
Output  
Press this key to access the output menu list.  
Display  
OUTP:COUP <char>  
Command Function  
Select output coupling (AC or DC)  
*RST  
Execute *RST command to place the ac source in the  
factory-default state  
TTLT:SOUR <char>  
Select Trigger Out source coupling (BOT, EOT or LIST)  
BOT = beginning of trensient  
EOT = end of transient  
LIST = TTLT trigger (see Programming Guide)  
TTLT:STATE <value>  
IMP:STATE <value>  
IMP:REAL <value>  
IMP:REAC <value>  
PON:STATE <char>  
RI <char>  
Set Trigger Out state (ON or OFF)  
Set output impedance programming (ON or OFF)  
Set real part of output impedance  
Set reactive part of output impedance  
Select power-on state command (RST or RCL0)  
Sets remote inhibit mode (LATCHING, LIVE, or OFF)  
Sets discrete fault indicator state (ON or OFF)  
Select the DFI source (QUES, OPER, ESB, RQS, or OFF)  
(see Chapter 4 of Programming Guide)  
DFI <char>  
DFI:SOUR <char>  
Notes:  
value = a numeric value  
char = a character string parameter  
and  
and  
scroll through the command list.  
scroll through the parameter list.  
43  
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4 - Front Panel Operation  
Protection and Status Control Keys  
The Protect and Status keys control the protection functions and status registers of the ac source. Refer to  
Chapter 4 of the Programming guide for more information on the status registers.  
Protect  
Press this key to access the protection menu list.  
Display  
PROT:CLEAR  
Command Function  
Clear the status registers of all activated protection signals.  
The fault causing a signal must be corrected or removed  
before the register can be cleared.  
CURR:PROT <char>  
VOLT:PROT <value>  
DELAY <value>  
Set overcurrent protection function (ON or OFF).  
Set the overvoltage protection level1  
Set the time delay for activating a protection fault after  
programming the output  
Shift  
Status  
Press this key to access the status menu list. Note that in the following list, commands  
ending in ? clear the registers when they are read. For this reason the registers are read  
Enter  
only after you press  
, not when you scroll to the command  
Display  
*CLS  
STATUS:PRESET  
*ESR? <value>  
*STB <value>  
Command Function  
Executes the clear status (*CLS) command  
Execute the STATus:PRESet command  
Return Event Status register value  
Return Status Byte register value  
OPER:EVEN? <value> Return STAT:OPER:EVENT? value  
OPER:COND <value> Return STAT:OPER:COND? value  
QUES:EVEN? <value> Return STAT:QUES:EVENT? value  
QUES:COND <value>  
Return STAT:QUES:COND? value  
Notes:  
1Programmed in peak volts. (Other voltage parameters are programmed in rms volts)  
value = a numeric value  
char = a character string parameter  
and  
and  
scroll through the command list.  
scroll through the parameter list.  
44  
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Front Panel Operation - 4  
Trigger and List Control Keys  
The Trigger Control key controls output transient triggers. The List key controls the generation of output  
lists. A list can contain up to 100 points, each of which can specify an output change (or transient). Refer  
to Chapter 4 of the Programming Guide for more information about programming triggers and lists.  
Trigger  
Control  
Press this key to access the trigger control menu list.  
Display  
INIT:IMMED  
INIT:CONT <char>  
TRIG:SOUR <char>  
Command Function  
Initiate the transient trigger sequence immediately.  
Set continuous trigger initiation (ON or OFF).  
Select transient trigger source (BUS, EXT, TTLT or  
IMM).  
DELAY <value>  
ABORT  
Set trigger delay in seconds.  
Abort all trigger sequences.  
SYNC:SOUR <char>  
SYNC:PHASE <value>  
Select trigger sync source (PHASE or IMM).  
Set synchronous phase reference angle in degrees.  
Shift  
List  
Press this key to access the list commands  
Display  
COUNT <value>  
Command Function  
Specifies the number of times a list repeats.  
List of output dwell times.  
DWEL:<index> <value>  
FREQ:<index> <value>  
FSLW:<index> <value>  
IPK:<index> <value>  
OFFS:<index> <value>  
OSLW:<index> <value>  
List of output frequencies.  
List of output frequency slew rates  
List of output peak current limits.  
List of dc output voltages.  
Dc offset voltage slew rate list  
PHASE:<index> <value> List of output voltage phase angles.  
SHAP:<index> <char>  
List of output waveform shapes.1  
(SINE, SQUARE or CSIN) CSIN = clipped sine wave  
Response of list to triggers (ONCE or AUTO).  
List of Trigger Out pulses (0=no pulse; 1=pulse).  
List of ac output voltages.  
STEP<char>  
TTLT:<index> <value>  
VOLT:<index> <value>  
VSLW:<index> <value>  
List of output voltage slew rates.  
Notes:  
1User-defined waveshapes will also appear in this list when created.  
value = a numeric value  
char = a character string parameter  
index = a numeric value that represents a list point from 0 to 99  
and  
and  
scroll through the command list.  
scroll through the parameter list.  
Index  
Index  
and  
scroll through the desired list points. EOL is displayed when the  
automatically  
truncates or clears the list at the  
end of the list is reached. When a value is edited, pressing  
advances to the next list point. Pressing  
presently displayed list point.  
Enter  
Clear Entry  
45  
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4 - Front Panel Operation  
Entry Keys  
Refer to the examples later in this chapter for more details on the use of these keys.  
ENTRY  
Calibration  
7
4
8
9
6
5
2
Enter  
1
3
E
Clear Entry  
-
.
0
Figure 4-4. Entry Keys  
These keys let you scroll through choices in a parameter list that apply to a  
specific command. Parameter lists are circular; you can return to the starting  
position by continuously pressing either key. If the command has a numeric  
range, these keys increment or decrement the existing value.  
0
.
9
0
9
.
through  
are used for entering numeric values.  
is the decimal  
point. For example, to enter 33.6 press: 3 3 . 6 Enter.  
-
The backspace key deletes the last digit entered from the keypad. This key lets  
you correct one or more wrong digits before they are entered.  
Enter  
This key executes the entered value or parameter of the presently accessed  
command. Until you press this key, the parameters you enter with the other  
Entry keys are displayed but not entered into the ac source. Before pressing  
Enter  
you can change or abort anything previously entered into the display.  
After Enter is pressed, the ac source returns to Meter mode in most cases. In  
Harmonic or List mode, the ac sourse displays the next point in the list.  
E
Shift  
This key specifies an exponential power of 10. For example, the the value for  
100µs can be entered as either . 0 0 0 1 , or as 1 E 4  
Shift  
Shift  
This key is the minus sign.  
This key aborts a keypad entry by clearing the value. This key is convenient for  
correcting a wrong value or aborting a value entry. The display then returns to  
Clear Entry  
Clear Entry  
the previously set function. When editing a list, pressing  
truncates  
or clears the list at the presently displayed list point.  
Shift  
This key accesses the calibration menu (Refer to Appendix B to calibrate your  
ac source).  
Calibration  
46  
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Front Panel Operation - 4  
Examples of Front Panel Programming  
You will find these examples on the following pages:  
1
2
Setting the output voltage amplitude  
Setting the output frequency  
3
Setting the dc offset  
4
Setting a protection feature  
5
Clearing a protection feature  
6
7
8
Generating step, pulse, and list transients  
Programming trigger delays and phase synchronization  
Programming slew rates  
9
Measuring peak inrush current  
10  
11  
Setting the GPIB address or RS-232 parameters  
Saving and recalling operating states  
The examples in the ac source Programming Guide are similar to the ones in this section, except that they  
use SCPI commands.  
1 - Setting the Output Voltage Amplitude  
NOTE:  
The maximum voltage that the ac source can output is limited by the peak value of the  
waveform, which is 425 Vpeak. Since the output is programmed in units of rms volts, the  
maximum value that can be programmed is dependent on the peak-to-rms ratio of the  
selected waveform. For a sinewave, the maximum ac voltage that can be programmed is  
300 Vrms. For other waveforms the maximum may be different.  
When you turn on the ac source, the default output shape is a 60 Hz sinewave at 0 Vrms. There is no  
output from the ac source because the default output state is OFF, as indicated by the Dis annunciator.  
Set the output to 120 V rms as follows:  
Action  
Display  
You can set the voltage in any of three ways:  
1.  
VOLT 120  
VOLT 127  
On the Function keypad, press Voltage. On the Entry keypad, press 1 2 0 Enter.  
This is the easiest way to enter an accurate value.  
2.  
On the Function keypad, press Voltage. On the Entry keypad, press ¯ or ° to  
increment or decrement the existing value. This technique is useful when you are  
making minor changes to an existing value.  
3
Rotate the front panel Voltage knob to obtain 120 V. This method is best when you  
120 V 60 Hz  
want to enter a value without using the voltage menu.  
Note: You will not see the new voltage on the front panel meter unless the output is  
enabled.  
To enable the output:  
4.  
120 V 60 Hz  
On the Function keypad, press Output On/Off. The Dis annunciator will go off,  
indicating that the voltage is now applied to the output terminals.  
47  
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4 - Front Panel Operation  
2 - Setting the Output Frequency  
When you turn on the ac source, the default output frequency is a 60 Hz. Assuming the voltage output  
from example 1 is in effect (120 Vrms sinewave), change the frequency to 50 Hz as follows:  
Action  
Display  
You can set the frequency in the same way that you set the voltage:  
1.  
2.  
FREQ 50  
FREQ 50  
On the Function keypad, press Freq. On the Entry keypad, press 5 0 Enter.  
On the Function keypad, press Freq. On the Entry keypad, press ¯ or ° to  
increment or decrement the existing value.  
3.  
Rotate the front panel Frequency knob to obtain 50 Hz.  
FREQ 50  
To verify the output, use the meter menu:  
4.  
The Meter menu is presently displaying the measured voltage and frequency of the  
selected output phase. Press  and ô to scroll through all of the measurement  
functions in the Meter Menu.  
120 V 50 Hz  
3 - Setting the DC Offset  
NOTE:  
Because the maximum voltage that the ac source can output is limited to 425 Vpeak, you  
cannot program a dc offset that will cause a previously programmed ac voltage to exceed  
the 425 Vpeak limit (acpeak + offset 425 V).  
The dc output capability of the ac source lets you independently control the dc and ac components of the  
output voltage. Program a dc offset of 100 V as follows:  
Action  
Display  
OFFSET  
1.  
0
On the Function keypad, press Voltage and then press ô until you access the  
OFFSET command.  
2.  
3.  
OFFSET 100  
On the Entry keypad, press 1 0 0 Enter.  
OUTP:COUP AC  
On the Function keypad, press Shift Output to access the output coupling command.  
Note: When the output coupling is set to ac, the ac source regulates the dc output  
voltage to 0, regardless of any programmed voltage offset.  
4.  
5.  
OUTP:COUP DC  
156 V 50 Hz  
Press ° and Enter to change the output coupling to DC.  
The ac source output now combines the previously programmed ac rms voltage and  
the dc offset voltage. This is indicated by the OUTPUT AC+DC annunciator. The  
front panel meter is measuring a 120 Vrms sinewave offset by 100 Vdc. This is  
indicated by the METER AC+DC annunciator.  
To measure just the ac or just the dc portion of the output:  
INP:COUP ACDC  
6.  
7.  
On the Function keypad, press Input to access the metering functions.  
INP:COUP  
DC  
Press ° until you access the DC parameter and press Enter. This changes the  
metering function to dc, which measures just the dc portion of the output in volts.  
The meter annunciator indicates METER AC  
100 V 50 Hz  
INP:COUP  
120 V 50 Hz  
AC  
Press Input again. Press ° until you access AC and press Enter. This changes the  
metering function to ac, which measures just the ac portion of the output in rms volts.  
The meter annunciator indicates METER DC  
8.  
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Front Panel Operation - 4  
4 - Setting a Protection Feature  
You can set the ac source to disable its output if it detects an overvoltage or overcurrent fault condition.  
Other automatic fault conditions (such as overtemperature) also will disable the output. Set the  
overcurrent protection feature as follows:  
Action  
Display  
PROT:CLEAR  
On the Function keypad, press Protect.  
1.  
2.  
3.  
Press ° to obtain the overcurrent command.  
CURR:PROT OFF  
CURR:PROT ON  
On the Entry keypad, press once to scroll to the ON parameter and press Enter. The  
OCP annunciator will light, indicating that the overcurrent protection circuit is on.  
CURR:PROT ON  
DELAY .1  
If you wish to set a time delay between the detection of the fault and the disabling of  
the output, scroll to the delay command on the protection menu. The default delay is  
100 milliseconds.  
DELAY .250  
PROT:CLEAR  
Enter the delay from the Entry keypad, such as . 2 5 0 Enter.  
4.  
When you want to restore normal operation after the cause of the overcurrent  
condition has been removed, scroll to the protection clear command and press  
Enter. The OCP annunciator then will go off.  
5 - Clearing Protection Conditions  
When the output Prot annunciator is on, the output of the ac source has turned off due to one or more of  
the following conditions:  
Annunciator  
Description  
Bit Number Bit Weight  
OV  
OCP  
SOA  
OT  
RI  
Rail  
overvoltage protection has tripped  
rms overcurrent protection has tripped  
safe operating area has tripped  
overtemperature protection has tripped  
an external remote inhibit signal has occurred  
rail protection has tripped  
0
1
2
4
9
1
2
4
16  
512  
2048  
11  
Action  
Display  
1.  
You must first identify the cause of the protection shutdown, and then eliminate its  
cause before you can continue operating the unit.  
2.  
3.  
4.  
*CLS  
To identify the problem, press Shift Status.  
Press ô to obtain the Questionable Event command.  
Press Enter to find out which bits have been set in the Event Register.  
QUES:EVEN?  
QUES:EVEN 20  
Note: The value returned is the sum of all of the binary weights of the bits that have  
been set. For example, a value of 20 indicates that bit 2 (bit weight=4) and bit 4 (bit  
weight=16) have been set. Refer to the previous table for the bits and bit weights that  
are assigned to the protection conditions. Refer to the following table for information  
on eliminating the couse of the protection condition. Refer to Chapter 4 in the ac  
source Programming Guide for a complete discussion of the status system.  
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4 - Front Panel Operation  
Condition  
Action  
OV Condition  
Usually overvoltage conditions are caused by an external source forcing voltage into the output  
of the ac source. Remove this external source to eliminate the overvoltage. You can also  
program the overvoltage level to a higher value, or turn the overvoltage protection off.  
In other cases the output voltage may have exceeded the user-programmed overvoltage level. In  
this case the unit may have inadvertently been programmed to a voltage that exceeded the  
programmed overvoltage level. The VOLTage:PROTection command sets the overvoltage  
protection level.  
Note: The overvoltage protection level is programmed in peak, not rms volts.  
OCP Condition  
SOA Condition  
If the CURRent:PROTection:STATe command has been programmed to to disable the output  
when rms current limit is activated, the unit will shut down. The rms current limit threshold is  
set by the CURRent command. In this case you must check to see why the load is drawing more  
current than the limit that has been programmed by the CURRent command.  
Protection circuits in the ac source let the load draw peak currents for short periods of time that  
exceed the continuous capability of the unit. This allows loads that require large inrush currents  
to turn on. The ac source will shut down if a combination of peak current duration and internal  
component temperature exceeds a predetermined limit.  
When this occurs, it means that the load has been drawing peak output currents that are beyond  
the capability of the ac source to supply for extended periods. Slower output slew rates and  
reduced peak current limit settings can be used to control the conditions that cause SOA  
shutdowns.  
OT Condition  
RI Condition  
When the internal operating temperatures of the ac source exceed predetermined thresholds, the  
output turns off. If this happens, you must let the unit cool down before continuing operation.  
If the Remote Inhibit input has been programmed to to disable the output when it receives an  
external signal, the unit will shut down. The Remote Inhibit input is set by the  
OUTPut:RI:MODE command. In this case you must check to what external event produced a  
signal on the RI input.  
Rail Condition  
The internal high voltage rail that provides power for the ac source’s output is continuously  
monitored for proper voltage level. If this voltage is not maintained within predetermined levels,  
the output will shut down. This can happen if an extenal source forces too much power into the  
ac source or if too much power is drawn from the ac source.  
Remove the external source to eliminate the rail condition. Slower output slew rates and reduced  
peak current limit settings can also be used to control the conditions that cause rail shutdowns.  
6 - Using Transient Voltage Modes  
The ac source voltage can be programmed in the following transient operating modes:  
STEP  
PULSE  
causes the output to permanently change to its triggered value.  
causes the output to change to its triggered value for a specific time, as determined by the  
Pulse menu parameters.  
LIST  
causes the output to sequence through a number of values, as determined by points entered  
in the List menu.  
FIXED  
disables transient operation for the selected function.  
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Front Panel Operation - 4  
Step Transient  
The Voltage Menu lets you specify an alternate or triggered voltage level that the ac source will apply to  
the output when it receives a trigger. Because the default transient voltage level is zero volts, you must  
first enter a triggered voltage before you can trigger the ac source to change the output amplitude. Refer  
to Chapter 4 of the Programming Guide for more information about programming triggers.  
In the following example, the voltage output is set to 120 Vrms and then stepped down to 102 Vrms.  
Action  
Display  
1.  
0 V 60 Hz  
On the Function keypad, press Output On/Off to enable the output. The Dis  
annunciator will go off.  
2.  
3.  
VOLT 120  
VOLT:T 0  
Press Voltage to access the Voltage Menu. On the Entry keypad, press 1 2 0 Enter.  
Access the Voltage Menu again and press ô to access the triggered voltage  
command.  
4.  
5.  
VOLT:T 102  
On the Entry kepad, press 1 0 2 Enter.  
Access the Voltage Menu again and press ô to access the voltage mode command. It  
should be in the default FIXED mode. An ac source function in the FIXED mode  
does not respond to triggers. On the Entry keypad, press ¯ or ° to scroll through the  
mode parameters. When you have STEP, press Enter.  
VOLT:M STEP  
6.  
7.  
INIT:IMMED  
102 V 60 HZ  
Press Trigger Control and Enter. This initiates (or enables) one immediate trigger  
action.  
Press Shift Trigger. This sends the ac source an immediate trigger signal to change  
the output voltage. The triggered voltage value now becomes the VOLT value.  
Pulse Transient  
In the following example, the output is four 83.3-millisecond, 120 Vrms pulses at 60 Hz. The figure  
shows the trigger, pulse count, pulse period, and duty cycle.  
NOTE:  
From the Output Menu, execute the *RST command to reset the ac source. This is  
necessary because any previously programmed functions remain in effect until cleared.  
Trigger  
count = 4  
120Vrms  
102Vrms  
83.3ms  
250ms  
Figure 4-5. Pulse Transients  
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4 - Front Panel Operation  
Action  
Display  
1.  
2.  
VOLT 102  
VOLT 120  
Press Voltage to access the Voltage Menu. On the Entry keypad, press 1 0 2 Enter.  
Press ô to access the triggered voltage command. On the Entry keypad, press 1 2 0  
Enter.  
3.  
Access the Voltage Menu again and press ô to access the voltage mode command. On  
the Entry keypad, press ¯ or ° to scroll through the mode parameters to obtain  
PULSE and press Enter.  
VOLT:M PULSE  
4.  
5.  
6.  
WIDTH .0833  
DCYCLE 33  
Press Pulse to access the Pulse Menu. From the Entry keypad, press  
. 0 8 3 3 Enter to enter a pulse width of 83.3 milliseconds.  
Access the Pulse Menu and press ô to access the duty cycle command. From the Entry  
keypad, press 3 3 Enter to change the duty cycle to 33%.  
Access the Pulse Menu and press ô to access the pulse count. On the Entry keypad,  
press 4 and Enter.  
COUNT  
4
7.  
8.  
INIT:IMMED  
102 V 60 HZ  
Press Trigger Control and Enter to initiate the transient trigger sequence.  
Press Shift Trigger. This sends the ac source an immediate trigger signal to generate  
the four output pulses.  
Note: The ac source output returns to 102 V at the completion of the output pulses.  
List Transient  
Lists are the most flexible means of generating multiple or synchronized transient outputs. The following  
figure shows a voltage output generated from a list. The output shown represents three different ac  
voltage pulses (160 volts for 33 milliseconds, 120 volts for 83 milliseconds, and 80 volts for 150  
milliseconds) separated by 67-millisecond, 0-volt intervals.  
The list specifies the pulses as three voltage points (point 0, 2, and 4), each with its corresponding dwell  
point. The intervals are three zero-voltage points (point 1, 3, and 5) of equal intervals. The count  
parameter causes the list to execute twice when started by a single trigger.  
NOTE:  
From the Output Menu, execute the *RST command to reset the ac source. This is  
necessary because any previously programmed functions remain in effect until cleared.  
Trigger  
160 Vrms  
0
1
3
4
5
2
List Count = 1  
List Count = 2  
Figure 4-6. List Transients  
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Front Panel Operation - 4  
Action  
Display  
1.  
2.  
3.  
4.  
VOLT:M FIXED  
Press Voltage to access the Voltage Menu. Then press ô to access the voltage mode  
command.  
On the Entry keypad, press ¯ or ° to scroll through the mode parameters to obtain LIST  
and press Enter.  
VOLT:M LIST  
COUNT  
2
Access the List Menu by pressing Shift List. The first menu command is the count. From  
the Entry keypad, change the list count from the default (1) to 2. Press Enter.  
Access the List menu again and press ô until you access the dwell time. This specifies  
the "on" time for each voltage point, which is effectively the output pulse width. The first  
dwell point (0) appears in the display. On the Entry keypad, press . 0 3 3 and Enter.  
DWEL 0 .033  
5.  
Pressing the Enter key automatically advances to the step in the list. Enter the following  
values for dwell list points 1 through 5: .067, .083, .067, .150, .067. Press Enter to  
enter each value. When you finish, you will be at point 6, which is the end of the list.  
DWEL 1 .067  
DWEL 2 .083  
DWEL 3 .067  
DWEL 4 .150  
DWEL 5 .067  
DWEL 6 EOL  
Note: Press Shift Index or Shift ôIndex to access and edit any list point.  
6.  
7.  
Press ô until you access the voltage list. This specifies the amplitude of each output point  
during its corresponding dwell period. The first voltage list point (0) appears in the  
display. On the Entry keypad, press 1 6 0 and Enter.  
VOLT 0 160  
Pressing the Enter key automatically advances to the step in the list. Enter the following  
values for voltage list points 1 through 5: 0, 120, 0, 80, 0. Press Enter to enter each  
value. When you finish, you will be at point 6, which is the end of the list.  
VOLT 1  
0
VOLT 2 120  
VOLT 3  
VOLT 4  
VOLT 5  
0
80  
0
Note: Press Shift Index or Shift ôIndex to access and edit any list point.  
VOLT 6 EOL  
8.  
Press ô until you access the step command. Check that it is at the default mode (AUTO).  
STEP AUTO  
This lets a single trigger run your list for the specified count.  
9.  
0 V 60 Hz  
INIT:IMMED  
0 V 60 Hz  
Press Output On/Off to enable the output. The Dis annunciator will go off.  
Press Trigger Control and Enter to initiate the transient trigger sequence.  
10.  
11.  
Press Shift Trigger. This sends the ac source an immediate trigger to generate the four  
output pulses. The output returns to the immediate value at the end of the list.  
Note: To clear a list, press Clear Entry. This truncates or clears the list at the presently  
displayed list point. Each list must be accessed and cleared separately.  
7 - Trigger Delays and Phase Synchronization  
The ac source trigger system also lets you program trigger delays as well as synchronize output changes  
to a specific phase angle of the output waveform.  
In example j, the output transient is triggered immediately at the receipt of the trigger signal. In example  
ô, a delay time of approximately 16.7 milliseconds elapses between the occurence of the trigger and the  
start of the output transient. In example í, the trigger source is programmed for phase synchronization,  
which means that the transient occurs at the first occurrence of the specified phase angle after the trigger  
signal is received.  
53  
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4 - Front Panel Operation  
Note that phase synchronization is referenced to an internal phase signal. The output of the unit is  
normally offset by 0° with respect to this internal reference. Because synchronized transient events  
always occur with respect to the internal reference, the output will normally be in phase with the value  
programmed for phase synchronization. (The Phase command can be used to change the offset of the  
output with respect to the internal phase reference.)  
Trigger  
VOLT T level  
1
VOLT level  
VOLT T level  
VOLT level  
2
0.000  
0.0167  
VOLT T level  
VOLT level  
3
0
90  
Figure 4-7. Trigger Delays and Phase Synchronization  
Example  
Display  
VOLT 120  
VOLT:T 150  
VOLT:M STEP  
INIT:IMMED  
VOLT 120  
j
This example uses the default trigger parameters. First, access the Voltage  
menu and program the immediate and triggered voltage levels, followed by  
the voltage transient mode.  
Then press Trigger Control and Enter, followed by Shift Trigger.  
In this example, you will set a trigger delay. First, access the Voltage menu  
and program the immediate and triggered voltage levels, followed by the  
voltage transient mode.  
ô
VOLT:T  
150  
VOLT:M STEP  
DELAY 0  
DELAY .0167  
Press Trigger Control. Then press ô until you access the delay parameter.  
On the Entry keypad, press . 0 1 6 7 Enter.  
INIT:IMMED  
Then press Trigger Control and Enter, followed by Shift Trigger.  
This example uses the phase sync mode with no delay, but synchronized at 90.  
First, access the Voltage menu and program the immediate and triggered  
voltage levels, followed by the voltage transient mode.  
VOLT 120  
VOLT:T 150  
VOLT:M STEP  
í
DELAY 0  
SYNC:SOUR PHASE  
Press Trigger Control. Press ô until you access the delay parameter. If  
necessary, set it to 0. Press ô until you access the sync source command. On  
the Entry keypad, press ° to obtain PHASE. Press Enter.  
SYNC:PHAS 90  
INIT:IMMED  
Access the Trigger Control menu again and press ô to access the sync phase  
reference parameter. On the Entry keypad, program a 90° phase reference by  
entering 9 0 Enter.  
Then press Trigger Control and Enter, followed by Shift Trigger.  
54  
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Front Panel Operation - 4  
8 - Using Slew Rates to Generate Waveforms  
As shown in the previous examples there are a number of ways that you can generate custom waveforms.  
Programmable slew rates provide additional flexibility when customizing waveforms. The following  
figure illustrates how programmable slew rates are applied in the transient operating modes.  
In example , an immediate slew rate of 50 volts/second is used whenever a new output voltage is  
programmed. In example ô, a triggered slew rate of 50 volts/second steps the voltage level to its new  
value. 50 volts/second becomes the new immediate slew rate in step mode. In example í, a triggered  
slew rate of 50 volts/second is used at the start of the pulse. The immediate slew rate of infinity applies at  
the trailing edge of the pulse. In example ÷, the slew rates are set by the values in the voltage slew list.  
New VOLT level  
SLEW rate  
1 SLEW:MODE FIXED  
VOLT:T level  
SLEW:T rate  
2 SLEW:MODE STEP  
SLEW rate  
SLEW rate  
VOLT:T level  
SLEW:T rate  
width  
SLEW:T  
3 SLEW:MODE PULSE  
rate  
SLEW [2]  
SLEW rate  
VOLT level  
SLEW [0]  
SLEW [1]  
4 SLEW:MODE LIST  
SLEW [3]  
TRIGGER  
APPLIED  
LIST  
COMPLETE  
Figure 4-8. Programming Slew Rates  
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4 - Front Panel Operation  
Example  
Display  
j
This example uses the immediate slew rate. First, access the Voltage menu  
and press ô until you access the mode command. On the Entry keypad, press  
° to obtain FIXED. Press Enter.  
VOLT:M FIXED  
SLEW 50  
Access the voltage menu and press ô until you access the slew command. On  
the Entry keypad, press 5 0 Enter to program a slew rate of 50 volts/second.  
Whenever a new immediate voltage value is entered, the output will slew to  
the new level at 50 volts/second.  
Step mode uses the triggered slew rate. First, access the Voltage menu,  
program the immediate and triggered voltage levels, and set the slew mode to  
STEP.  
VOLT 120  
ô
VOLT:T  
150  
SLEW:M STEP  
Access the Voltage menu and press ô to access the immediate slew  
SLEW: 9.9+E37  
command. On the Entry keypad, enter a value that equals infinity.  
Access the Voltage menu and press ô until you access the triggered slew  
command. On the Entry keypad, enter a value such as 5 0 Enter, which sets  
the triggered slew rate to 50 volts/second.  
SLEW:T 50  
INIT:IMMED  
Then press Trigger Control and Enter, followed by Shift Trigger.  
After the trigger has been sent, in step mode, the triggered value becomes the  
new immediate value.  
Pulse mode uses the triggered slew rate at the leading edge of the pulse, and  
the immediate slew rate at the trailing edge of the pulse. First, access the  
Voltage menu, program the immediate and triggered voltage levels, and set  
the slew mode to PULSE.  
VOLT 120  
í
VOLT:T  
150  
SLEW:M PULSE  
Access the Pulse menu and program the pulse count, duty cycle, and pulse  
period.  
COUNT  
DCYCLE 33  
PER .0166  
2
Access the Voltage menu and press ô to access the immediate slew  
SLEW: 9.9+E37  
command. On the Entry keypad, enter a value that equals infinity.  
Access the Voltage menu and press ô until you access the triggered slew  
command. On the Entry keypad, enter a value such as 5 0 Enter, which sets  
the triggered slew rate to 50 volts/second.  
SLEW:T 50  
INIT:IMMED  
Then press Trigger Control and Enter, followed by Shift Trigger.  
When the voltage slew mode is set to LIST, the slew rates are set by the  
values in the voltage slew list. Refer to the List Transient example for more  
information on how to program lists. You must program the voltage values  
and dwell times as explaied in that example. You must also program a slew  
rate for each point in the list (even if it is 9.9+E37).  
÷
NOTE:  
When specifying a dwell time, you must take the slew time into consideration. If the  
dwell time at any given list point is less than the slew time at the same point, the voltage  
will never reach its programmed level before the next list point becomes active.  
56  
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Front Panel Operation - 4  
9 - Measuring Peak Inrush Current  
Peak inrush current is a non-repetitive measurement in the sense that peak inrush current occurs only  
when the unit under test is first turned on. In order to repeat the measurement, you must turn the unit off  
and wait for any input filter capacitors to discharge completely.  
This example shows you how you can measure the peak inrush current using the front panel meter. The  
voltage is set to 120 V rms and the output is triggered at an output phase of 75°, which optimizes the  
conditions under which inrush current is applied to the unit under test.  
Action  
Display  
1.  
2.  
VOLT  
0
Set the immediate voltage to 0. Press Voltage, then press 0 and Enter.  
Set the triggered voltage to 120 V rms. In the Voltage menu, press ô to  
access the triggered voltage command. Then press 1 2 0 Enter.  
VOLT:T 120  
3.  
4.  
Set the voltage mode to step. In the Voltage menu, press ô to access the  
mode command. Press ° to scroll to STEP and press Enter.  
VOLT:M STEP  
Make sure the triggered voltage slew rate is set to the fastest possible speed.  
In the Voltage menu, access the triggered slew command. If necessary, reset  
the slew rate to a faster speed.  
SLEW:T 9.9000+E37  
5.  
Make sure the peak current and rms current limits are set to high values. In the  
Current menu, access the rms current limit and then the peak current limit  
commands. If necessary, reset the rms current and the peak current limits to  
higher values.  
CURR:LEV 6.5  
CURR:PEAK 40  
(Agilent 6811B units have an rms current limit of 3.25 A. Agilent 6813B units  
have an rms current limit of 13 A and a peak current limit of 80 A)  
6.  
Synchronize the trigger source with a reference phase angle. In the Trigger  
Control menu, press ô to access the sync source command. Press ° to obtain  
PHASE and press Enter.  
SYNC:SOUR PHASE  
7.  
8.  
9.  
SYNC:PHAS 75  
INIT:IMMED  
0 A PK NR  
Set the reference phase angle to 75°. In the Trigger Control menu, press ô to  
access the sync phase command. Then press 7 5 Enter.  
Initiate (or enable) the unit for one immediate trigger from the front panel.  
Press Trigger Control and Enter.  
Set the meter function to measure nonrepetitive peak inrush current. In the  
Meter menu, press ô to access the peak inrush current display.  
10. Enable the output by pressing Output On/Off.  
0 V 60 HZ  
11.  
48 A PK NR  
Send the trigger to step the output from 0 V to 120 V. Press Shift Trigger.  
The inrush current is displayed on the Meter.  
NOTE:  
With fast and/or large voltage transitions, the CC annunciator may turn on due to current  
in the output capacitor. This is normal and will limit the rate of change of output voltage.  
To prevent the CC operating mode from limiting the rate of change of output voltage,  
program the peak current limit to a higher value.  
57  
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4 - Front Panel Operation  
10 - Setting the GPIB Address and RS-232 Parameters  
Your ac source is shipped with the GPIB address set to 5 This address can only be changed from the front  
panel using the Address menu located under the Address key. This menu is also used to select the RS-  
232 interface and specify RS-232 parameters such baud rate and parity.  
Action  
Display  
To set the GPIB address, proceed as follows:  
1.  
2.  
ADDRESS 5  
ADDRESS 7  
On the System keypad, press Address.  
Enter the new address. For example, Press 7, Enter.  
To configure the RS-232 interface, proceed as follows:  
1.  
2.  
ADDRESS 5  
On the System keypad, press Address.  
Scroll through the Address menu by pressing ô . The interface command  
lets you select the RS-232 interface. The baudrate command lets you  
select the baudrate. The parity command lets you select the parity.  
INTF RS232  
BAUDRATE 600  
PARITY EVEN  
3.  
The ¯ and ° keys let you select the command parameters.  
11 - Saving and Recalling Operating States  
You can save up to 16 states (from location 0 to location 15) in non-volatile memory and recall them  
from the front panel. All programmable settings are saved. List data, however, cannot be saved in state  
storage. Only one list is saved in non-volatile memory.  
Action  
Display  
To save an operating state in location 1, proceed as follows:  
1.  
2.  
Set the instrument to the operating state that you want to save.  
*SAV 1  
*RCL 1  
Save this state to location 1. Press Shift Save 1 Enter.  
To recall a saved state in location 1, proceed as follows:  
1.  
To select the power-on state of the ac source, proceed as follows:  
Recall the state saved in location 1 by pressing Recall 1 Enter  
1.  
PON:STATE RST  
On the Function keypad, press Shift Output, and scroll through the Output  
menu until you get to the PON state command.  
2.  
Use the ¯ and ° keys to select either RST or RCL0. RST sets the power-on  
state of the unit as defined by the *RST command. RCL0 sets the power-on  
state of the unit to the state saved in *RCL location 0.  
To clear the non-volatile memory of the ac source, proceed as follows:  
1.  
*RST  
On the Function keypad, press Shift Output and scroll to the *RST com-  
mand. Then press Enter. This returns the unit to the factory-default settings.  
2.  
3.  
*SAV 1  
Save these settings to location 1. Press Shift Save 1 Enter.  
Repeat step #2 for memory locations 2 through 16..  
*SAV 2  
*SAV 3  
*SAV 4  
.
.
...*SAV 16  
58  
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A
Specifications  
Specifications  
Table A-1 lists the specifications of the ac source. Performance specifications are warranted over the  
o
ambient temperature range of 0 to 40 C. Unless otherwise noted, specifications are for a sinewave with  
a resistive load at an output frequency range of 45 Hz to 1 kHz, in ac-coupled mode after a 30-minute  
warmup. Refer to table A-3 for ac source operation with output frequencies from dc to 45 Hz.  
1
Table A-1. Performance Specifications  
Parameter  
Agilent 6811B  
Agilent 6812B  
1
Agilent 6813B  
1
1
Phases:  
375 VA  
285 W  
300 V  
± 425 V  
3.25 A  
2.5 A  
750 VA  
575 W  
300 V  
± 425 V  
6.5 A  
5 A  
40 A  
40 A  
1750 VA  
1350 W  
300 V  
± 425 V  
13 A  
10 A  
80 A  
80 A  
Maximum Output Ratings  
Power (VA):  
dc Power (Watts):  
rms Voltage:  
dc Voltage:  
rms Current (in real-time mode):  
dc Current:  
2
40 A  
40 A  
Repetitive peak Current :  
2
Non-repetitive peak Current  
(inrush):  
Crest Factor (current):  
2
12  
6
6
3
Output Frequency Range :  
dc; 45 Hz1 kHz  
Constant Voltage Ripple  
and Noise  
rms relative to full scale:  
rms:  
60 dB  
300 mV  
(20 kHz10 MHz):  
Regulation:  
0.5% of full scale  
0.1% of full scale  
Load (rms detection mode):  
Line:  
0.25% at 50 Hz/60 Hz  
1% worst-case 45 Hz1 kHz  
Maximum Total Harmonic  
Distortion:  
Load Power Factor  
Capability:  
01  
100 mV  
Maximum Fixed dc Offset  
Voltage (ac coupled):  
Programming Accuracy  
0.15% + 0.3 V  
0.5% + 0.3 V  
1% + 0.3 V)  
rms Voltage  
rms Voltage  
(45100 Hz):  
(>100500 Hz):  
(>500 Hz1 kHz):  
Frequency:  
dc Voltage:  
(45100 Hz):  
(>100500 Hz):  
(>500 Hz1 kHz):  
Frequency:  
o
(rms detection mode @ 25 C  
o
±5 C), ±(% of output+offset)  
0.01% + 10 µHz  
0.1% + 0.5 V  
0.03% + 100 mV  
0.1% + 100 mV  
0.2% + 100 mV  
0.1% + 0.5 V  
0.5% + 0.3 V  
Measurement Accuracy  
o
o
(@25 C ±5 C), ± (% of  
output + offset)  
0.01% + 0.01 Hz  
0.03% + 150 mV  
dc Voltage:  
59  
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A - Specifications  
Table A-1. Performance Specifications (continued)  
Parameter  
Measurement Accuracy  
(continued)  
Agilent 6811B/6812B/6813B  
rms Current High Range  
(45100 Hz):  
0.05% + 10 mA  
0.05% + 15 mA  
0.05% + 30 mA  
(>100500 Hz):  
(>500 Hz1 kHz):  
rms Current Low Range  
(45100 Hz):  
0.05% + 1.5 mA  
0.05% + 8 mA  
0.05% + 25 mA  
(>100500 Hz):  
(>500 Hz1 kHz):  
repetitive pk current High Range  
(45 Hz1 kHz):  
0.05% + 150 mA  
0.03% + 150 mA  
repetitive pk current Low Range  
(45 Hz1 kHz):  
Power (VA) Low Range  
0.1% + 1.5 VA + 1.2 mVA/V  
0.1% + 2 VA + 1.2 mVA/V  
0.1% + 6 VA + 1.2 mVA/V  
(45100 Hz):  
(>100500 Hz):  
(>500 Hz-1 kHz):  
Power (VA) High Range  
0.1% + 1.5 VA + 12 mVA/V  
0.1% + 2 VA + 12 mVA/V  
0.1% + 6 VA + 12 mVA/V  
(45100 Hz):  
(>100500 Hz):  
(>500 Hz1 kHz):  
Power (Watts) Low Range  
(45100 Hz):  
0.1% + 0.3 W + 1.2 mW/V  
0.1% + 1.2 W + 1.2 mW/V  
0.1% + 2.5 W + 1.2 mW/V  
(>100500 Hz):  
(>500 Hz1 kHz):  
Power (Watts) High Range  
(45100 Hz):  
0.1% + 0.3 W + 12 mW/V  
0.1% + 1.2 W + 12 mW/V  
0.1% + 2.5 W + 12 mW/V  
(>100500 Hz):  
(>500 Hz1 kHz):  
0.01  
Power Factor:  
0.03% + 100 mV + 0.2%/kHz  
Harmonic Measurement  
Accuracy  
(50/60 Hz, @25 C ±5 C),  
± (% of output + offset)  
Voltage Magnitude:  
o
o
Current Magnitude (Low Range)  
Fundamental:  
0.03% + 1.5 mA  
0.03% + 1 mA + 0.2%/kHz  
Harmonics 249:  
Current Magnitude (High Range)  
Fundamental:  
0.05% + 5 mA  
0.03% + 3 mA + 0.2%/kHz  
Harmonics 249:  
1
2
3
Specifications subject to change without notice.  
These specifications are subject to the restrictions of Table 1-3.  
Product may be operated between dc and 45 Hz subject to operating conditions described in Table A-3.  
60  
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Specifications - A  
Supplemental Characteristics  
Table A-2 lists the supplemental characteristics, which are not warranted but are descriptions of typical  
performance determined either by design or type testing.  
Table A-2. Supplemental Characteristics  
Parameter  
Agilent 6811B  
Agilent 6812B  
Agilent 6813B  
174220 Vac  
ac Input Voltage Range (Vac):  
87106 Vac (100 Vac nom.)  
(200/208 Vac nom.)  
191254 Vac  
(230 Vac nom.)  
104127 Vac (120 Vac nom.)  
174220 Vac (200/208 Vac nom.)  
191254 Vac (230 Vac nom.)  
12 A (100 Vac),  
10 A (120 Vac),  
7.5 A (200/208 Vac),  
6.5 A (230 Vac)  
28 A (100 Vac),  
24 A (120 Vac),  
15 A (200/208 Vac),  
13A (230 Vac)  
20 A (230 Vac)  
22 A (200/208 Vac)  
Maximum Input Current (rms):  
1000 VA/700 W  
2500 VA/1400 W  
3800 VA/2600 W  
Maximum Input Power:  
ac Input Frequency:  
4763 Hz  
300 Vrms/425 Vdc  
50 µs  
Isolation to Ground:  
Output Voltage Risetime:  
(output change from 10 to 90% or 90 to 10% of its total  
excursion with full resistive load)  
Remote Inhibit Response Time:  
Remote Sense Capability:  
Programmable Output Impedance Ranges  
Resistance:  
15 ms  
Up to 1 Vrms can be dropped across each load lead.  
01 Ω  
20 µH1 mH  
Inductance:  
Average Programming Accuracy  
rms Current:  
1.2% of output + 50 mA  
2% of output + 5 Vpeak  
0.1 V/s  
OVP:  
ac Voltage Slew Rate (rms):  
Frequency Slew Rate:  
± 0.01%  
Average Programming Resolution  
rms Voltage:  
125 mV  
250 mV  
6 mV/s  
20 mV/s  
0.05 Hz/s  
2 Vpeak  
4 mA  
25 mA  
10 µHz  
dc Voltage:  
ac Voltage Slew Rate (rms):  
dc Voltage Slew Rate:  
Frequency Slew Rate:  
Overvoltage Programming(OVP):  
rms Current:  
peak Current:  
Output Frequency:  
Output Impedance  
2 mA  
12.5 mA  
4 mA  
25 mA  
Resistive Component:  
Inductive Component:  
0.01 Ω  
10 µH  
Average Measurement Resolution  
rms Voltage:  
10 mV  
2 mA  
rms Current:  
5% of reading + 0.1%  
THD (for a fundamental amplitude 5% of full scale):  
Measurement System  
4096 points  
50 µs  
25250 µs  
12 bits  
Measurement Buffer Length:  
Measurement/Generation Synchronization:  
Measurement Acquisition Sampling Rate Range:  
Voltage/Current Digitization Accuracy:  
Voltage/Current Digitization Resolution:  
Harmonic Measurement Time(amplitude):  
Meas:Curr:Harm? <n>  
16 bts  
400 ms  
10 s  
Meas:Array:Curr:Harm?  
61  
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A - Specifications  
Table A-2. Supplemental Characteristics (continued)  
Parameter  
Agilent 6811B  
Agilent 6812B  
Agilent 6813B  
Transient System  
Phase Synchronization:  
± 100 µs  
200 µs to 4.3 x 10 seconds  
5
Pulse Width Range:  
Pulse/Dwell Timing Accuracy:  
Pulse Duty Cycle Range:  
Pulse Count Range:  
± 0.01%  
0 to 100 %  
1 to Infinity Pulses  
1 to 100 steps  
LIST Length:  
Minimum LIST Dwell Time:  
LIST Count Range:  
200 µs  
1 to Infinity LIST repeats  
External Trigger Response Time:  
200 µs  
1 kHz  
1024 points  
Maximum External Trigger Rate:  
Waveform Table Voltage Resolution:  
RS-232 Interface Capabilities  
Baud Rates:  
300, 600, 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600  
7 bits even or odd parity; 8 bits without parity  
SCPI (Standard Commands for Programmable Instruments),  
Elgar 9012 PIP  
Data Format:  
Language:  
Trig In/Trig Out Characteristics  
V
= 0.8 max. @ 1.25 mA  
= 3.3 V max. @ 1.25 mA  
Trig Out (HC TTL output):  
ol  
V
oh  
V
V
= 0.8 V max.  
= 2 V max.  
Trig In (10k pullup):  
il  
ih  
INH/FLT Characteristics  
Maximum Ratings:  
16.5 Vdc between INH terminals; FLT terminals; and from INH  
terminals to chassis ground  
I
= 1.25 mA max.  
= 0.5 Vmax.  
INH Terminals:  
FLT Terminals:  
ol  
V
V
ol  
= 0.8 V max.  
= 2 V min.  
il  
ih  
V
tw = 100 µs min.  
td = 4 ms typical  
Saveable Data (nonvolatile)  
Instrument States:  
User-defined waveforms  
List data:  
16 (0 to 15)  
12 (with 1024 data points in each)  
1 to 100 steps (for each list function)  
GPIB Interface Capabilities  
Language:  
SCPI, Elgar 9012 PIP  
AH1, C0, DC1, DT1, E2, LE1, PP0, RL1, SH1, SR1, TE6  
Interface:  
10 ms  
1 year  
Programming Time:  
Recommended Calibration Interval:  
Regulatory Compliance  
Listed to:  
UL 3111-1  
CSA 22.2 No. 1010-1  
IEC 1010  
Certified to:  
Conforms to:  
CISPR-11, Group 1, Class A  
RFI Suppression Complies with:  
Dimensions  
132.6 mm (5.25 in.)  
425.5 mm (16.75 in.)  
574.7 mm (22.6 in.)  
Height (add 12.7 mm or 0.5 in. for feet)  
Width:  
Depth:  
28.2 kg (62 lb)  
31.8 kg (70 lb)  
32.7 kg (72 lb)  
36.4 kg (80 lb)  
Net Weight:  
Shipping Weight:  
62  
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Specifications - A  
Operation Below 45 Hz  
The following operating characteristics apply for output frequencies between 45Hz and 1Hz. Below 1  
Hz, instantaneous values meet the dc specifications. The ac source output is set to: sinewave, dc coupled,  
real-time regulation, and is connected to a linear load.  
Table A-3. Operation Below 45 Hz  
Reactive power (VA)  
Real Power (watts)  
10 Hz  
10 Hz  
1750  
750  
1750  
750  
375  
375  
675  
287  
142  
5 Hz  
0
0
6
8
10  
2
4
1
8
10  
4
1
2
6
Frequency (linear scale)  
Frequency (linear scale)  
RMS current derating (A)  
13  
6.5  
RMS current programming accuracy (% error)  
45 Hz  
10  
3.75  
7
3.5  
1.75  
5
5 Hz  
2% error at 10 Hz  
0
100  
1
10  
0
20  
30  
40  
10  
0
Frequency  
Frequency  
AC coupled frequency response (dB)  
Meets Measurement Accuracy specifications under the following  
conditions:  
0
0.1%error @ 40Hz  
1%error @ 10Hz  
Minimum  
measured  
frequency  
45 Hz  
Maximum allowable  
frequency component  
to avoid aliasing  
20 kHz  
Sample rate  
25 µs  
30% error @ 2Hz (-3dB point)  
50 µs  
22.5 Hz  
11.25 Hz  
5.625 Hz  
4.5 Hz  
10 kHz  
50 kHz  
2.5 kHz  
2 kHz  
-10  
-20  
100 µs  
200 µs  
250 µs  
slope of 1 (20dB/decade)  
(Anti aliasing filters have a corner frequency of 12.5 kHz.)  
1
10  
100  
.1  
Frequency  
63  
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B
Verification and Calibration  
Introduction  
This appendix includes verification and calibration procedures for the Agilent 6811B/6812B/6813B AC  
Power Solutions. Instructions are given for performing the procedures either from the front panel or from  
a controller over the GPIB.  
The verification procedures do not check all the operating parameters, but verify that the ac source is  
performing properly. Performance Tests, which check all the specifications of the ac source, are given in  
the applicable ac source Service Manual.  
Because the output of the ac source must be enabled during verification or calibration, proceed with  
caution, since voltages and currents will be active at the output terminals.  
Important  
Perform the verification procedures before calibrating your ac source. If the ac source  
passes the verification procedures, the unit is operating within its calibration limits and  
does not need to be recalibrated.  
WARNING: LETHAL VOLTAGES. Ac sources can supply 424 V peak at their output. DEATH  
on contact may result if the output terminals or circuits connected to the output are  
touched when power is applied. These procedures must be performed by a qualified  
electronics technician or engineer trained on this equipment.  
Equipment Required  
The equipment listed in the following table, or the equivalent to this equipment, is required for  
verification and calibration.  
65  
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B - Verification and Calibration  
Table B-1. Equipment Required  
Equipment  
Characteristics  
Recommended Model  
Agilent 3458A  
Digital Voltmeter  
Resolution: 10 nV @ 1 V  
Readout: 8.5 digits  
Accuracy: >20 ppm  
Current Monitor1  
Ratio Transformer2  
Load Resistor  
Guildline 7320/0.01  
0.01 , ±200 ppm, 10 Watts  
30:1 ratio, 50 ppm, 45 Hz to 1 kHz  
20 , 10 A, 1800 Watts min.  
1 , 100 Watts min.  
Impedance Resistor  
GPIB Controller  
Full GPIB capabilities  
HP Series 200/300 or equivalent  
1The 4- terminal current shunt is used to eliminate output current measurement error caused by voltage drops in the  
load leads and connections. It has special current-monitoring terminals inside the load connection terminals. Connect  
the voltmeter directly to these current-monitoring terminals.  
2A ratio transformer is required only when verifying output voltage readback to MIL-STD-45662A 4:1 test  
equipment ratio requirements.  
Test Setup  
Figure B-1 shows the setup for the tests. Be certain to use load leads of sufficient wire gauge to carry the  
full output current (see Chapter 2).  
Agilent 6811B/6812B/6813B  
Agilent 3458A  
SENSE  
COM COM  
01  
01  
DMM  
S1  
RL  
Rs  
Agilent 3458A  
DMM  
1
30  
RL = Load resistor for CC test (20 ohms)  
Rs = Current Monitor resistor ( 0.01 ohms )  
Rz = Impedance resistor ( 1 ohm )  
RZ  
S1 = Switch is for convenience (not required).  
Figure B-1. Verification & Calibration Test Setup  
66  
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Verification and Calibration - B  
Performing the Verification Tests  
The following procedures assume you understand how to operate the ac source from the front panel as  
explained in Chapter 4.  
When performing the verification tests from a GPIB controller, you may have to consider the relatively  
slow settling times and slew rates of the ac source as compared to computer and system voltmeters.  
Suitable WAIT statements can be inserted into the test program to give the ac source time to respond to  
the test commands.  
Perform the following tests for operation verification in the order indicated.  
1.  
2.  
3.  
Turn-On Checkout  
Voltage Programming and Measurement Accuracy  
Current Measurement Accuracy  
Turn-On Checkout Procedure  
Perform the Turn-On Checkout as directed in Chapter 3.  
NOTE:  
The ac source must pass turn-on selftest before you can proceed with the verification  
tests.  
AC Voltage Programming and Measurement Accuracy  
This test verifies the voltage programming, GPIB measurement, and front panel meter functions. Values  
read back over the GPIB should be the same as those displayed on the front panel.  
If more than one meter or if a meter and an oscilloscope are used, connect each to the sense terminals by  
separate leads to avoid mutual coupling effects.  
Action  
Normal Result  
1.  
2.  
Make sure the ac source is turned off. Connect the DVM and ratio  
transformer as shown in the test setup in Figure B-1.  
Turn on the ac source with no load. In the Output menu, execute  
the *RST command to reset the unit. Enable the output by  
pressing Output On/Off. Program the output voltage as follows:  
CV annunciator on.  
Output current near 0.  
VOLT 300, FREQ 45, SHAPE:SIN, CURR 1  
3.  
Record voltage readings at the DVM1 and on the front panel  
display.  
Readings within specified High  
range limits (300 V/45 Hz).  
4.  
5.  
Program FREQ 400  
Record voltage readings at the DVM1 and on the front panel  
display.  
Readings within specified High  
range limits (300 V/400 Hz).  
4.  
7.  
Program FREQ 1000, CURR:PEAK 40  
Record voltage readings at the DVM1 and on the front panel  
display.  
Readings within specified High  
range limits (300 V/1 kHz).  
1Multiply the DVM reading by the transformer ratio if a ratio transformer is used.  
67  
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B - Verification and Calibration  
DC Voltage Programming and Measurement Accuracy  
CAUTION:  
Disconnect the ratio transformer for this test.  
This test verifies the dc voltage programming, GPIB readback, and front panel meter functions. Values  
read back over the GPIB should be the same as those displayed on the front panel. Connect the negative  
terminal of the DVM to the COM output terminal to determine the ± dc offset voltages.  
Action  
Normal Result  
1.  
2.  
Make sure the ac source is turned off. Connect the DVM directly  
to the sense terminals.  
Turn on the ac source with no load. In the Output menu, execute  
the *RST command to reset the unit. Enable the output by  
pressing Output On/Off. Program the output voltage as follows:  
Output voltage at +425 Vdc  
Output current near 0.  
VOLT 0, OUTP:COUP DC, OFFSET 425  
3.  
Record DC voltage readings at the DVM and on the front panel  
display.  
Readings within specified dc voltage  
programming and readback limits.  
4.  
5.  
Program OFFSET 425  
Output voltage at 425 Vdc  
Record DC voltage readings at the DVM and on the front panel  
display.  
Readings within specified dc voltage  
programming and readback limits.  
RMS Current Accuracy Test  
This test verifies the accuracy of the current measurement in rms detection mode.  
Action  
Normal Result  
1.  
2.  
Turn off the ac source and connect the DVM, the 20 ohm load  
resistor and current shunt as shown in Figure B-1 with S1 closed.  
Connect the DVM across the current shunt.  
Turn on the ac source. In the Output menu, execute the *RST  
command to reset the unit. Enable the output by pressing Output  
On/Off. Program the output as follows:  
CC annunciator on  
Output current at 3.0 (Agilent  
6811B)  
or 5.0 A (all other models).  
For Agilent 6811B:  
VOLT 50, CURR:RANGE LOW, CURR:LEV 3.00  
For all other models:  
VOLT 50, CURR:RANGE LOW, CURR:LEV 5.00  
3.  
4.  
Record the DVM voltage reading and calculate the rms current.  
Program CURR:RANGE HIGH  
Readings within specified limits.  
CC annunciator on  
Output current at 3.0 (Agilent  
6811B)  
or 5.0 A (all other models).  
5.  
Record the DVM voltage reading and calculate the rms current.  
Readings within specified limits.  
68  
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Verification and Calibration - B  
Table B-2. Agilent 6811B Verification Test Record  
Model Agilent 6811B  
Report No.____________Date_____________  
Test Description  
Minimum  
Recorded Results  
Maximum  
Specification  
Specification  
Voltage Programming and Measurement Accuracy  
300 Vrms accuracy at 45 Hz  
Front Panel Measurement  
299.250 V  
Vrms 190 mV  
_______V  
_______V  
300.750 V  
Vrms +190 mV  
300 Vrms accuracy at 400 Hz  
Front Panel Measurement  
_______V  
_______V  
301.800 V  
Vrms +190 mV  
298.200 V  
Vrms 190 mV  
300 Vrms accuracy at 1 kHz  
Front Panel Measurement  
_______V  
_______V  
303.300 V  
Vrms +400 mV  
296.700 V  
Vrms 400 mV  
DC Programming and Measurement Accuracy  
425 Vdc accuracy  
Front Panel Measurement  
424.075 V  
Vdc 0.277 V  
_______V  
_______V  
425.925 V  
Vrms +0.277 V  
_______V  
_______V  
425 Vdc accuracy  
Front Panel Measurement  
425.925 V  
Vrms +0.277 V  
424.075 V  
Vdc 0.277 V  
RMS Current Measurement Accuracy  
Low Range  
High Range  
(Iout = calculated output current @ 60Hz)  
_______A  
_______A  
Iout +0.0039 A  
Iout +0.0095 A  
Iout 0.0039 A  
Iout 0.0095 A  
Table B-3. Agilent 6812B Verification Test Record  
Model Agilent ______________________  
Report No.____________  
Date_____________  
Test Description  
Minimum Recorded Results  
Maximum  
Specification  
Voltage Programming and Measurement Accuracy  
Specification  
300 Vrms accuracy at 45 Hz  
Front Panel Measurement  
299.250 V  
Vrms 190 mV  
_______V  
_______V  
300.750 V  
Vrms +190 mV  
300 Vrms accuracy at 400 Hz  
Front Panel Measurement  
_______V  
_______V  
301.800 V  
Vrms +190 mV  
298.200 V  
Vrms 190 mV  
300 Vrms accuracy at 1 kHz  
Front Panel Measurement  
_______V  
_______V  
303.300 V  
Vrms +400 mV  
296.700 V  
Vrms 400 mV  
69  
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B - Verification and Calibration  
Table B-3 (continued)  
DC Programming and Measurement Accuracy  
425 Vdc accuracy  
Front Panel Measurement  
424.075 V  
Vdc 0.277 V  
_______V  
_______V  
425.925 V  
Vrms +0.277 V  
_______V  
_______V  
425 Vdc accuracy  
Front Panel Measurement  
425.925 V  
Vrms +0.277 V  
424.075 V  
Vdc 0.277 V  
RMS Current Measurement Accuracy  
Low Range  
High Range  
(Iout = calculated output current @ 60Hz)  
_______A  
_______A  
Iout +0.0045 A  
Iout +0.0175 A  
Iout 0.0045 A  
Iout 0.0175 A  
Table B-4. Agilent 6813B Verification Test Record  
Model Agilent ______________________  
Report No.____________  
Date_____________  
Test Description  
Minimum Recorded Results  
Maximum  
Specification  
Voltage Programming and Measurement Accuracy  
Specification  
300 Vrms accuracy at 45 Hz  
Front Panel Measurement  
299.250 V  
Vrms 190 mV  
_______V  
_______V  
300.750 V  
Vrms +190 mV  
300 Vrms accuracy at 400 Hz  
Front Panel Measurement  
_______V  
_______V  
301.800 V  
Vrms +190 mV  
298.200 V  
Vrms 190 mV  
300 Vrms accuracy at 1 kHz  
Front Panel Measurement  
_______V  
_______V  
303.300 V  
Vrms +400 mV  
296.700 V  
Vrms 400 mV  
DC Programming and Measurement Accuracy  
425 Vdc accuracy  
Front Panel Measurement  
422.575 V  
Vdc 0.277 V  
_______V  
_______V  
427.425 V  
Vrms +0.277 V  
_______V  
_______V  
425 Vdc accuracy  
Front Panel Measurement  
427.425 V  
Vrms +0.277 V  
422.575 V  
Vdc 0.277 V  
RMS Current Measurement Accuracy  
Low Range  
High Range  
(Iout = calculated output current @ 60Hz)  
_______A  
_______A  
Iout +0.0045 A  
Iout +0.0175 A  
Iout 0.0045 A  
Iout 0.0175 A  
70  
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Verification and Calibration - B  
Performing the Calibration Procedure  
Table B-1 lists the equipment required for calibration. Figure B-1 shows the test setup.  
NOTE:  
You do not have to do a complete calibration each time. You may calibrate only the  
voltage or current and proceed to "Saving the Calibration Constants." However, before  
you calibrate OVP, you must first calibrate the output voltage.  
The following parameters may be calibrated:  
ac output voltage  
output voltage measurement  
overvoltage protection (OVP)  
ac output current  
output current measurement  
output impedance  
Before calibrating the output impedance, you must first calibrate the output voltage and the output curent.  
Front Panel Calibration Menu  
The Entry keypad is used for calibration functions.  
Press this key to access the calibration menu.  
Shift  
Cal  
Display  
CAL ON <value>  
Command Function  
Turns calibration mode on when the correct password  
value is entered.  
CAL OFF  
Turns calibration mode off  
CAL:LEV <char>  
CAL:DATA <value>  
CAL:VOLT:OFFSET  
CAL:VOLT:DC  
CAL:VOLT:AC  
CAL:VOLT:PROT  
CAL:CURR:AC  
CAL:CURR:MEAS  
CAL:IMP  
Advance to next step in sequence (P1, P2, P3, or P4).  
Input a calibration measurement.  
Begin voltage offset calibration  
Begin dc voltage calibration sequence  
Begin ac voltage calibration sequence  
Begin voltage protection calibration  
Begin ac current calibration sequence  
Begin current measurement calibration sequence  
Begin output impedance calibration sequence  
Saves the calibration constants in non-volatile memory.  
Set new calibration password.  
CAL:SAVE  
CAL:PASS <value>  
Notes:  
value = a numeric value  
char = a character string parameter  
Use  
Use  
and  
and  
to scroll through the command list.  
to scroll through the parameter list.  
71  
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B - Verification and Calibration  
Front Panel Calibration  
WARNING: LETHAL VOLTAGES. Ac sources can supply 424 V peak at their output. DEATH  
on contact may result if the output terminals or circuits connected to the output are  
touched when power is applied. These procedures must be performed by a qualified  
electronics technician or engineer trained on this equipment.  
The following procedures assume you understand how to operate front panel keys (see Chapter 4).  
Enable Calibration Mode  
Action  
Display  
1.  
*RST  
Reset the unit by selecting Output, scrolling to the *RST command and  
pressing Enter.  
2.  
3.  
CAL ON 0.0  
To begin calibration press Shift Cal, scroll to CAL ON and press Enter.  
Enter the calibration password from Entry keypad and press Enter. lf the  
password is correct the Cal annunciator will come on.  
CAL DENIED  
If CAL DENIED appears, then an internal switch has been set to prevent the  
calibration from being changed. (see the Service Manual.)  
OUT OF RANGE  
lf the password is incorrect, an error occurs. If the active password is lost, the  
calibration function can be recovered by setting an internal switch that  
defeats password protection. (see the Service Manual.)  
Calibrating and Entering Voltage Offset Values  
Connect the negative terminal of the DVM to the COM output terminal. Note that some calibration  
points are negative; be sure to enter the CAL:DATA as negative values when required.  
Action  
Display  
4.  
5.  
6.  
7.  
8.  
Connect the DVM (dc volts mode) directly to the ac source. Do not connect  
the ratio transformer or load resistor shown in Figure B-1.  
CAL:VOLT:OFFSET  
CAL:LEV P1  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL VOLT OFFSET command, and  
press Enter.  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL LEV P1 command, and press  
Enter to select the first calibration point.  
CAL:DATA 0.00  
CAL:LEV P2  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to CAL DATA 0.00, and use the Entry  
keypad to enter the dc voltage value displayed on the DVM.  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL LEV P1 command, use ° to  
scroll to the P2 parameter, and press Enter. This selects the second  
calibration point.  
9.  
CAL:DATA 0.00  
CAL:LEV P3  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to CAL DATA 0.00, and use the Entry  
keypad to enter the dc voltage value displayed on the DVM.  
10.  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL LEV P1 command, use ° to  
scroll to the P3 parameter, and press Enter.  
72  
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Verification and Calibration - B  
11.  
12.  
13.  
CAL:DATA 0.00  
CAL:LEV P4  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to CAL DATA 0.00, and use the Entry  
keypad to enter the dc voltage value displayed on the DVM.  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL LEV P1 command, use ° to  
scroll to the P4 parameter, and press Enter.  
CAL:DATA 0.00  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to CAL DATA 0.00, and use the Entry  
keypad to enter the dc voltage value displayed on the DVM.  
The ac source is now holding the new voltage offset calibration constants in RAM.  
Calibrating and Entering DC Voltage Gain Values  
Connect the negative terminal of the DVM to the COM output terminal. Note that some calibration  
points are negative; be sure to enter the CAL:DATA as negative values when required.  
Action  
Display  
14.  
15.  
16.  
17.  
18.  
Connect the DVM (dc volts mode) directly to the ac source. Do not connect  
the ratio transformer or load resistor shown in Figure B-1.  
CAL:VOLT:DC  
CAL:LEV P1  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL VOLT DC command, and  
press Enter.  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL LEV P1 command, and press  
Enter to select the first calibration point.  
CAL:DATA 0.00  
CAL:LEV P2  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to CAL DATA 0.00, and use the Entry  
keypad to enter the dc voltage value displayed on the DVM.  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL LEV P1 command, use ° to  
scroll to the P2 parameter, and press Enter. This selects the second  
calibration point.  
19.  
20.  
21.  
CAL:DATA 0.00  
CAL:LEV P3  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to CAL DATA 0.00, and use the Entry  
keypad to enter the dc voltage value displayed on the DVM.  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL LEV P1 command, use ° to  
scroll to the P3 parameter, and press Enter.  
CAL:DATA 0.00  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to CAL DATA 0.00, and use the Entry  
keypad to enter the dc voltage value displayed on the DVM.  
The ac source is now holding the new dc voltage gain calibration constants in RAM.  
Calibrating and Entering AC rms Voltage Gain Values  
Action  
Display  
22.  
23.  
24.  
25.  
Connect the DVM (ac volts mode) to the ac source using the ratio  
transformer shown in Figure B-1.  
CAL:VOLT:AC  
CAL:LEV P1  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL VOLT AC command, and  
press Enter.  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL LEV P1 command, and press  
Enter to select the first calibration point.  
CAL:DATA 0.00  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to CAL DATA 0.00, and use the Entry  
keypad to enter the product of the transformer ratio times the ac voltage  
value displayed on the DVM.  
73  
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B - Verification and Calibration  
26.  
CAL:LEV P2  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL LEV P1 command, use ° to  
scroll to the P2 parameter, and press Enter. This selects the second  
calibration point.  
27.  
CAL:DATA 0.00  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to CAL DATA 0.00, and use the Entry  
keypad to enter the product of the transformer ratio times the ac voltage  
value displayed on the DVM.  
28.  
29.  
CAL:LEV P3  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL LEV P1 command, use ° to  
scroll to the P3 parameter, and press Enter.  
CAL:DATA 0.00  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to CAL DATA 0.00, and use the Entry  
keypad to enter the product of the transformer ratio times the ac voltage  
value displayed on the DVM.  
30.  
31.  
CAL:LEV P4  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL LEV P1 command, use ° to  
scroll to the P4 parameter, and press Enter.  
CAL:DATA 0.00  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to CAL DATA 0.00, and use the Entry  
keypad to enter the product of the transformer ratio times the ac voltage  
value displayed on the DVM.  
The ac source is now holding the new ac rms voltage calibration constants in RAM.  
Calibrating the OVP Trip Point  
Action  
Display  
32.  
33.  
CAL:VOLT:PROT  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to CAL VOLT PROT, and press Enter.  
Wait for the ac source to compute the OVP calibration constant. The  
display returns to Meter mode when the OVP calculation is complete.  
The ac source is now holding the new OVP calibration constants in RAM.  
Calibrating and Entering rms Current Values  
Action  
Display  
34.  
35.  
36.  
37.  
Connect the DVM (ac rms mode), current shunt, and load resistor as shown  
in figure B-1 with S1 closed.  
CAL:CURR:AC  
CAL:LEV P1  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL CURR AC command, and  
press Enter.  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL LEV P1 command, and press  
Enter.  
CAL:DATA 0.00  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL DATA 0.00 command.  
Calculate the rms current value (DVM ac rms voltage/shunt resistance), and  
use the Entry keypad to enter the rms current.  
38.  
39.  
CAL:LEV P2  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL LEV P1 command, use ° to  
scroll to the P2 parameter, and press Enter.  
CAL:DATA 0.00  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL DATA 0.00 command.  
Calculate the rms current value (DVM ac rms voltage/shunt resistance), and  
use the Entry keypad to enter the rms current.  
The ac source is now holding the new rms current calibration constants in RAM.  
74  
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Verification and Calibration - B  
Calibrating and Entering rms Current Measurement Values  
Action  
Display  
40.  
41.  
42.  
43.  
Connect the DVM (ac rms mode), current shunt, and load resistor as shown  
in figure B-1 with S1 closed.  
CAL:CURR:MEAS  
CAL:LEV P1  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL CURR MEAS command, and  
press Enter.  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL LEV P1 command, and press  
Enter.  
CAL:DATA 0.00  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL DATA 0.00 command.  
Calculate the rms current value (DVM ac rms voltage/shunt resistance), and  
use the Entry keypad to enter the rms current.  
44.  
45.  
CAL:LEV P2  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to CAL LEV P1 command, use ° to scroll  
to the P2 parameter, and press Enter.  
CAL:DATA 0.00  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL DATA 0.00 command.  
Calculate the rms current value (DVM ac rms voltage/shunt resistance), and  
use the Entry keypad to enter the rms current.  
The ac source is now holding the new rms current measurement calibration constants in RAM.  
Calibrating the Output Impedance  
Action  
Display  
46.  
47.  
48.  
Connect only the output impedance resistor across the output of the ac  
source. Do not connect any other equipment.  
CAL:IMP  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to the CAL IMP command, and press  
Enter.  
Wait for the ac source to compute the output impedance calibration  
constant. The display returns to Meter mode when the calculation is  
complete.  
The ac source is now holding the new output impedance calibration constants in RAM.  
Saving the Calibration Constants  
CAUTION:  
Storing calibration constants overwrites the existing ones in non-volatile memory. If you  
are not sure you want to permanently store the new constants, omit this step. The ac  
source calibration will then remain unchanged.  
Action  
Display  
49.  
50.  
CAL:SAVE  
CAL OFF  
Press Shift Calibration, scroll to CAL SAVE, and press Enter.  
Press Shift Calibration, select CAL OFF, and press Enter to exit  
Calibration mode. *RST and *RCL will also set the calibration state to  
OFF.  
75  
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B - Verification and Calibration  
Changing the Calibration Password  
The factory default password is 0. You can change the password when the ac source is in calibration  
mode (which requires you to enter the existing password). Proceed as follows:  
Action  
Display  
1.  
2.  
3.  
4.  
CAL ON 0.0  
Begin by pressing Shift Cal and scrolling to the CAL ON command.  
Enter the existing password from Entry keypad and press Enter  
Press Shift Cal and scroll to the CAL PASS command.  
CAL:PASS 0  
Enter the new password from the keypad. You can use any number with up  
to six digits and an optional decimal point. If you want the calibration  
function to operate without requiring any password, change the password to  
0 (zero).  
NOTE:  
If you want the calibration function to operate without requiring any password, change  
the password to 0 (zero).  
Calibration Error Messages  
Errors that can occur during calibration are shown in the following table.  
Table B-5. GPIB Calibration Error Messages  
Error  
401  
402  
403  
404  
405  
406  
Meaning  
CAL switch prevents calibration (This is a hardware disable, see the ac source Service Manual.)  
CAL password is incorrect  
CAL not enabled  
Computed readback cal constants are incorrect  
Computed programming cal constants are incorrect  
Incorrect sequence of calibration commands  
Calibration Over the GPIB  
You can calibrate the ac source by using SCPI commands within your controller programming  
statements. Be sure you are familiar with calibration from the front panel before you calibrate from a  
controller. Each front panel calibration command has a corresponding SCPI command.  
The SCPI calibration commands are explained in Chapter 3 of the ac source Programming Guide.  
Calibration error messages that can occur during GPIB calibration are shown in table B-3.  
Agilent Calibration Program Listing  
Figure B-2, Sheets 1 through 3, lists the calibration program. This program can be run on any controller  
operating under Agilent BASIC. The assumed power supply address is 705 and calibration password is 0.  
If required, change these parameters in the appropriate statements.  
76  
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Verification and Calibration - B  
10  
!
20  
! AC Source calibration program  
Rev B.00.00  
30  
!
40  
ASSIGN @Ac TO 705  
!
50  
60  
PRINT TABXY(5,5),"This program will calibrate the 6811B/12B/13B AC Power Solutions."  
70  
PRINT TABXY(5,7),"Equipment requirements are:  
PRINT TABXY(37,8),"0.01 ohm <200ppm Current Shunt"  
Agilent3458A or equivalent DVM"  
80  
90  
PRINT TABXY(37,9),"20 ohm >1800 watt power resistor for all models"  
100  
110  
120  
130  
140  
150  
160  
170  
180  
190  
200  
210  
220  
230  
240  
250  
260  
270  
280  
290  
300  
310  
320  
330  
340  
350  
360  
370  
380  
390  
400  
410  
420  
430  
440  
450  
460  
470  
480  
490  
500  
510  
520  
530  
540  
550  
PRINT TABXY(37,10),"1 ohm >100 watt impedance resistor"  
PRINT TABXY(37,11),"30:1 <50ppm Ratio Transformer"  
PRINT TABXY(3,13),"Ratio Transformer is required to when calibrating to MIL-STD-45662A. If the"  
PRINT TABXY(2,14),"ratio transformer is not used the measurement uncertainty must be recalculated."  
!
DISP "Press CONT to continue"  
PAUSE  
CLEAR SCREEN  
PRINT TABXY(15,5),"1. Turn the AC Source off"  
PRINT TABXY(15,7),"2. Disconnect all loads"  
PRINT TABXY(15,9),"3. Connect the 3458A to the rear terminal block"  
PRINT TABXY(15,11),"4. Set the 3458A to DC VOLTS"  
PRINT TABXY(15,13),"5. Turn on the AC Source"  
!
DISP "Press CONT to begin DC OFSET and DC GAIN calibration"  
PAUSE  
CLEAR SCREEN  
PRINT TABXY(25,5),"CALIBRATING VOLTAGE OFFSET"  
PRINT TABXY(20,7),"There are 4 points to be calibrated"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:STATE ON"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:VOLT:OFFS"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:LEV P1"  
WAIT 10  
INPUT "Enter DC offset voltage reading from DVM",Off_p1  
PRINT TABXY(25,9),"Point 1 entered"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:DATA";Off_p1  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:LEV P2"  
WAIT 10  
INPUT "Enter DC offset voltage reading from DVM",Off_p2  
PRINT TABXY(25,11),"Point 2 entered"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:DATA";Off_p2  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:LEV P3"  
WAIT 10  
INPUT "Enter DC offset voltage reading from DVM",Off_p3  
PRINT TABXY(25,13),"Point 3 entered"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:DATA";Off_p3  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:LEV P4"  
WAIT 10  
INPUT "Enter DC offset voltage reading from DVM",Off_p4  
PRINT TABXY(25,15),"Point 4 entered"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:DATA";Off_p4  
WAIT 3  
CLEAR SCREEN  
PRINT TABXY(25,5),"CALIBRATING DC VOLTAGE GAIN"  
PRINT TABXY(20,7),"There are 3 points to be calibrated"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:VOLT:DC"  
Figure B-2. Calibration Program Listing (Sheet 1 of 3)  
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B - Verification and Calibration  
560  
570  
580  
590  
600  
610  
620  
630  
640  
650  
660  
670  
680  
690  
700  
710  
720  
730  
740  
750  
760  
770  
780  
790  
800  
810  
820  
830  
840  
850  
860  
870  
880  
890  
900  
910  
920  
930  
940  
950  
960  
970  
980  
990  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:LEV P1"  
WAIT 10  
INPUT "Enter DC voltage reading from DVM",Dc_p1  
PRINT TABXY(25,9),"Point 1 entered"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:DATA";Dc_p1  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:LEV P2"  
WAIT 10  
INPUT "Enter DC voltage reading from DVM",Dc_p2  
PRINT TABXY(25,11),"Point 2 entered"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:DATA";Dc_p2  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:LEV P3"  
WAIT 10  
INPUT "Enter DC voltage reading from DVM",Dc_p3  
PRINT TABXY(25,13),"Point 3 entered"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:DATA";Dc_p3  
WAIT 3  
CLEAR SCREEN  
PRINT TABXY(5,10),"1. Connect the 3458A to the rear terminals via the ratio transformer"  
PRINT TABXY(18,12),"2. Set the 3458A to AC VOLTS"  
!
DISP "Press CONT to begin AC PROGRAMMING and MEASUREMENT calibration"  
PAUSE  
CLEAR SCREEN  
PRINT TABXY(18,5),"CALIBRATING AC POGRAMMING and MEASUREMENT"  
PRINT TABXY(20,7),"There are 4 points to be calibrated"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:VOLT:AC"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:LEV P1"  
WAIT 10  
INPUT "Enter AC rms ( transformer ratio * DVM reading)",Ac_p1  
PRINT TABXY(25,9),"Point 1 entered"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:DATA";Ac_p1  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:LEV P2"  
WAIT 10  
INPUT "Enter AC rms ( transformer ratio * DVM reading)",Ac_p2  
PRINT TABXY(25,11),"Point 2 entered"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:DATA";Ac_p2  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:LEV P3"  
WAIT 10  
INPUT "Enter AC rms ( transformer ratio * DVM reading)",Ac_p3  
PRINT TABXY(25,13),"Point 3 entered"  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:DATA";Ac_p3  
OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:LEV P4"  
WAIT 3  
INPUT "Enter AC rms ( transformer ratio * DVM reading)",Ac_p4  
1000 PRINT TABXY(25,15),"Point 4 entered"  
1010 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:DATA";Ac_p4  
1020 WAIT 10  
1030 CLEAR SCREEN  
1040 PRINT TABXY(15,10),"CALIBRATING OVERVOLTAGE PROTECTION"  
1050 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:VOLT:PROT"  
1060 PRINT TABXY(30,15),"WAIT"  
1070 WAIT 30  
1071 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:SAVE"  
1072 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:STATE OFF"  
1080 CLEAR SCREEN  
1090 PRINT TABXY(15,5),"1. Turn off the AC Source"  
1100 PRINT TABXY(15,7),"2. Connect the current shunt and 20 ohm load resistor, see fig.B-1"  
Figure B-2. Calibration Program Listing (Sheet 2 of 3)  
78  
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Verification and Calibration - B  
1110 PRINT TABXY(15,9),"3. Connect the 3458A across the current shunt"  
1120 PRINT TABXY(15,11),"4. Set the 3458A to AC rms VOLTS"  
1130 PRINT TABXY(15,13),"5. Turn on the AC Source"  
1140 !  
1150 DISP "Press CONT to begin Current Program and Measurement calibration"  
1160 PAUSE  
1170 CLEAR SCREEN  
1180 PRINT TABXY(22,5),"CALIBRATING CURRENT POGRAMMING"  
1190 PRINT TABXY(20,7),"There are 2 points to be calibrated"  
1191 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:STATE ON"  
1200 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:CURR:AC"  
1210 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:LEV P1"  
1220 WAIT 10  
1230 INPUT "Enter AC rms current ( DVM reading divided by shunt resistance )",Ai_p1  
1240 PRINT TABXY(25,9),"Point 1 entered"  
1250 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:DATA";Ai_p1  
1260 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:LEV P2"  
1270 WAIT 10  
1280 INPUT "Enter AC rms current ( DVM reading divided by shunt resistance )",Ai_p2  
1290 PRINT TABXY(25,11),"Point 2 entered"  
1300 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:DATA";Ai_p2  
1310 WAIT 10  
1320 CLEAR SCREEN  
1330 PRINT TABXY(22,5),"CALIBRATING CURRENT MEASUREMENT"  
1340 PRINT TABXY(20,7),"There are 2 points to be calibrated"  
1350 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:CURR:MEAS"  
1360 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:LEV P1"  
1370 WAIT 10  
1380 INPUT "Enter AC rms current ( DVM reading divided by shunt resistance )",Am_p1  
1390 PRINT TABXY(25,9),"Point 1 entered"  
1400 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:DATA";Am_p1  
1410 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:LEV P2"  
1420 WAIT 10  
1430 INPUT "Enter AC rms current ( DVM reading divided by shunt resistance )",Am_p2  
1440 PRINT TABXY(25,11),"Point 2 entered"  
1450 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:DATA";Am_p2  
1460 WAIT 10  
1470 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:SAVE"  
1480 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:STATE OFF"  
1490 CLEAR SCREEN  
1500 !  
1510 !  
1520 PRINT TABXY(15,5),"1. Turn off the AC Source"  
1530 PRINT TABXY(15,7),"2. Disconnect all equipment from the AC Source"  
1540 PRINT TABXY(15,9),"3. Connect the 1 ohm impedance resistor, see fig.B-1"  
1550 PRINT TABXY(15,11),"4. Turn on the AC Source"  
1560 !  
1570 DISP "Press CONT to begin Output Impedance calibration"  
1580 PAUSE  
1590 PRINT TABXY(15,10),"CALIBRATING OUTPUT IMPEDANCE"  
1600 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:STATE ON"  
1610 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:IMP"  
1620 PRINT TABXY(30,15),"WAIT"  
1630 WAIT 30  
1640 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:SAVE"  
1650 OUTPUT @Ac;"CAL:STATE OFF"  
1660 CLEAR SCREEN  
1670 PRINT TABXY(25,10),"CALIBRATION COMPLETE"  
1680 END  
Figure B-2. Calibration Program Listing (Sheet 3 of 3)  
79  
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C
Error Messages  
Error Number List  
This appendix gives the error numbers and descriptions that are returned by the ac source. Error numbers  
are returned in two ways:  
Error numbers are displayed on the front panel  
Error numbers and messages are read back with the SYSTem:ERRor? query. SYSTem:ERRor?  
returns the error number into a variable and returns two parameters: an NR1 and a string.  
The following table lists the errors that are associated with SCPI syntax errors and interface problems. It  
also lists the device dependent errors. Information inside the brackets is not part of the standard error  
message, but is included for clarification. When errors occur, the Standard Event Status register records  
them in bit 2, 3, 4, or 5:  
Table C-1. Error Numbers  
Error Number Error String [Description/Explanation/Examples]  
Command Errors 100 through 199 (sets Standard Event Status Register bit #5)  
–100 Command error [generic]  
–101 Invalid character  
–102 Syntax error [unrecognized command or data type]  
–103 Invalid separator  
–104 Data type error [e.g., "numeric or string expected, got block data"]  
–105 GET not allowed  
–108 Parameter not allowed [too many parameters]  
–109 Missing parameter [too few parameters]  
–112 Program mnemonic too long [maximum 12 characters]  
–113 Undefined header [operation not allowed for this device]  
–121 Invalid character in number [includes "9" in octal data, etc.]  
–123 Numeric overflow [exponent too large; exponent magnitude >32 k]  
–124 Too many digits [number too long; more than 255 digits received]  
–128 Numeric data not allowed  
–131 Invalid suffix [unrecognized units, or units not appropriate]  
–138 Suffix not allowed  
–141 Invalid character data [bad character, or unrecognized]  
–144 Character data too long  
–148 Character data not allowed  
–150 String data error  
–151 Invalid string data [e.g., END received before close quote]  
–158 String data not allowed  
–160 Block data error  
81  
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C - Error Messages  
–161 Invalid block data [e.g., END received before length satisfied]  
–168 Block data not allowed  
–170 Expression error  
–171 Invalid expression  
–178 Expression data not allowed  
Execution Errors –200 through –299 (sets Standard Event Status Register bit #4)  
–200 Execution error [generic]  
–221 Settings conflict [check current device state]  
–222 Data out of range [e.g., too large for this device]  
–223 Too much data [out of memory; block, string, or expression too long]  
–224 Illegal parameter value [device-specific]  
–225 Out of memory  
–270 Macro error  
–272 Macro execution error  
–273 Illegal macro label  
–276 Macro recursion error  
–277 Macro redefinition not allowed  
System Errors –300 through –399 (sets Standard Event Status Register bit #3)  
–310 System error [generic]  
–350 Too many errors [errors beyond 9 lost due to queue overflow]  
Query Errors –400 through –499 (sets Standard Event Status Register bit #2)  
–400 Query error [generic]  
–410 Query INTERRUPTED [query followed by DAB or GET before response complete]  
–420 Query UNTERMINATED [addressed to talk, incomplete programming message received]  
–430 Query DEADLOCKED [too many queries in command string]  
–440 Query UNTERMINATED [after indefinite response]  
Selftest Errors 0 through 99 (sets Standard Event Status Register bit #3)  
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
No error  
Non-volatile RAM RD0 section checksum failed  
Non-volatile RAM CONFIG section checksum failed  
Non-volatile RAM CAL section checksum failed  
Non-volatile RAM WAVEFORM section checksum failed  
Non-volatile RAM STATE section checksum failed  
Non-volatile RAM LIST section checksum failed  
Non-volatile RAM RST section checksum failed  
10 RAM selftest  
11 - 31 DAC selftest error, expected <n>, read <reading>  
Errors 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 apply to DAC12 1A and 1B  
Errors 16, 17, 18 apply to DAC12 2A  
Errors 19, 20, 21 apply to DAC12 2B  
Errors 22, 23 apply to DAC12 4A  
Errors 24, 25 apply to DAC12 4B  
Errors 26, 27, 28 apply to DAC12 3A and 3B  
Errors 29, 30, 31 apply to DAC12 5A and 5B  
82  
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Error Messages - C  
40 Voltage selftest error, output 1  
41 Voltage selftest error, output 2  
42 Voltage selftest error, output 3  
43 Current selftest error, output 1  
44 Current selftest error, output 2  
45 Current selftest error, output 3  
70 Fan voltage failure  
80 Digital I/O selftest error  
Device-Dependent Errors 100 through 32767 (sets Standard Event Status Register bit #3)  
200 Outgrd not responding  
201 Front panel not responding  
210 Ingrd receiver framing error  
211 Ingrd uart overrun status  
212 Ingrd received bad token  
213 Ingrd receiver buffer overrun  
214 Ingrd input buffer overrun  
215 Outgrd output buffer overrun  
216 RS-232 receiver framing error  
217 RS-232 receiver parity error  
218 RS-232 receiver overrun error  
219 Ingrd inbuf count sync error  
220 Front panel uart overrun  
221 Front panel uart framing  
222 Front panel uart parity  
223 Front panel buffer overrun  
224 Front panel timeout  
401 CAL switch prevents calibration  
402 CAL password is incorrect  
403 CAL not enabled  
404 Computed readback cal constants are incorrect  
405 Computed programming cal constants are incorrect  
406 Incorrect sequence of calibration commands  
600 Systems in mode:list have different list lengths  
601 Requested voltage and waveform exceeds peak voltage capability  
602 Requested voltage and waveform exceeds transformer volt-second rating  
603 Command only applies to RS-232 interface  
604 Trigger received before requested number of pre-trigger readings  
605 Requested RMS current too high for voltage range  
606 Waveform data not defined  
607 VOLT, VOLT:SLEW, and FUNC:SHAP modes incompatible  
608 Measurement overrange  
609 Output buffer overrun  
610 Command cannot be given with present SYST:CONF setting  
83  
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D
Line Voltage Conversion  
WARNING: Shock Hazard Hazardous voltage can remain inside the unit even after it  
has been turned off. This procedure should only be done by qualified  
electronics service personnel.  
Open the Unit  
Turn off the ac power to the unit and disconnect the power cord from the power outlet.  
Remove the four screws that secure the two carrying straps and outer cover (use a T25  
Torx drive).  
Slightly spread the bottom rear of the cover and pull it back to remove it from the front  
panel.  
Observe the two LEDs that are visible in the cutouts on each side of the unit. If either  
LED is on, there is hazardous voltage inside the unit. Wait until the LED goes out  
before proceeding (this may take several minutes).  
Check the Jumper Wire (Model Agilent 6811B/6812B only)  
Locate the line voltage jumper wire in the cutout at the side of the unit by the line cord  
(see Figure D-1).  
For 100 V or 120 V operation, install the jumper on the lug labeled:100/120.  
For 200 V, 208 V or 230 V operation, install the jumper on the lug labeled: 200/220.  
Check the Line Jumpers (all Models)  
Locate the line jumpers in the cutout at the side of the unit by the on/off switch.  
Configure the jumpers according to the line voltage shown in the accompanying label.  
When configuring a unit for 208 V, use the jumper settings shown for 200 V.  
Check the Power Transformer Connector (all Models)  
NOTE:  
This procedure is only required if you are changing the input voltage between  
100 V and 120 V or between 200/208 V and 230 V.  
Remove the screws securing the inner cover (use a T15 Torx drive).  
Remove the inner cover.  
Remove the screws securing the pc board behind the front panel (use a T15 Torx drive).  
85  
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D - Line Voltage Conversion  
You need only to lift the board out of the way, you do not need to disconnect any cables.  
Locate the connector in front of the power transformer.  
For 100 V, 200 V, or 208 V operation, install the plug on the connector labeled: 200 V  
input.  
For 120 V or 230 V operation, install the plug on the connector labeled: 240 V input.  
Replace the pc board and inner cover.  
NOTE:  
Be sure to replace all of the screws removed in steps 9 and 11.  
Close the Unit  
Replace the outer cover.  
Change the label on the rear panel to reflect the changed input voltage rating.  
Reconnect the power and turn on the unit.  
NOTE:  
Line voltage conversion does not require any fuse changes.  
!! WARNING!!  
If LEDs are on,  
HAZARDOUS  
voltages are present!  
LEFT SIDE  
RIGHT SIDE  
(with cover removed)  
(withcover removed)  
Jumper Settings  
100  
120  
200  
230  
JUMPER WIRE  
POWER TRANSFORMER  
LINE JUMPERS  
Figure D-1. Line Voltage Conversion Components  
86  
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Index  
—A—  
—E—  
—F—  
ac line conversion, 85  
accessories, 12  
airflow, 22  
annunciators  
φ1, 38  
entry keys, 46  
, 46  
0 ... 9, 46  
Clear Entry, 46  
E, 46  
Enter, 46  
Addr, 38  
Cal, 38  
CC, 38  
CV, 38  
Dis, 38  
Err, 38  
error messages, 34  
error numbers, 81  
OCP, 38  
features, 13  
Prot, 38  
Fixed, 50  
Rmt, 38  
Shift, 38  
SRQ, 38  
Tran, 38  
FLT connections, 27  
frequency control, 14  
front panel, 37  
annuncuiators, 38  
Unr, 38  
AWG ratings, 25  
controls and indicators, 14, 37  
keys, 38  
function keys, 40  
, 40  
Index, 40  
—C—  
immediate action, 40  
Output On/Off, 40  
Phase Select, 40  
Trigger, 40  
cables, 12  
calibration, 71  
ac rms voltage gain, 73  
dc voltage gain, 73  
enable, 72  
fuses, 23  
equipment, 65  
error messages, 76  
menu, 71  
—G—  
output impedance, 75  
OVP, 74  
password, 76  
program listing, 76  
rms current, 74, 75  
saving, 75  
general information, 11  
ground, earth, 12  
guide, programming, 11  
guide, user’s, 11  
GPIB, 58  
address, 58  
setup, 66  
connections, 28  
voltage offset, 72  
capabilities, 14  
cleaning, 21  
—H—  
conversion, ac line, 85  
hazardous voltages, 65  
history, 6  
—D—  
—I—  
damage, 21  
dc offset, 48  
INH connections, 27  
input  
digital connections, 27  
digital connector, 21  
dimensions, 22  
connections, 23  
power, 12  
inrush current capability, 17  
inspection, 21  
87  
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Index  
Phase, 43  
Pulse, 43  
—L—  
lethal voltages, 65  
line fuse  
replacing, 35  
line voltage conversion, 85  
List, 50, 52  
Shape, 43  
Voltage, 42  
output coupling  
ac, 19, 48  
dc, 19, 48  
load regulation, 18  
load voltage drops, 25  
location, 22  
output impedance  
<1 ohm, 18  
reactive, 18  
real, 18  
low frequency operation (<45 Hz), 15, 63  
OV, 49  
OVLD, 34  
—M—  
manuals, 11, 21  
measure  
—P—  
ac only, 48  
ac+dc, 48  
dc only, 48  
meter  
parts - operator replaceable, 13  
peak current capability, 16  
peak current limit, 16  
peak inrush capacitance, 16  
Peak Inrush current  
measuring, 57  
ac, 48  
ac+dc, 48  
dc, 48  
Phase synchronization, 53  
power cord, 21  
installation, 23  
power receptacle, 12  
preliminary checkout, 31  
print date, 6  
Meter AC+DC, 38  
meter display keys  
Harmonic, 41  
Input, 41  
Meter, 41  
program listing  
calibration, 76  
protection  
—N—  
OCP, 49  
OT, 49  
OV, 49  
Rail, 49  
non-volatile memory  
clearing, 58  
storing, 39  
RI, 49  
SOA, 49  
—O—  
protection/status keys  
Protect, 44  
Status, 44  
Pulse, 51  
OCP, 49  
offset, 48  
operating features, 13  
options, 12  
OT, 49  
output  
—R—  
ac+dc, 48  
rack mount kit, 12  
rack mounting, 22  
Rail, 49  
real-time voltage regulation, 18  
recalling operating states, 58  
remote programming, 15  
remote sensing, 25  
OVP considerations, 27  
repacking, 21  
characteristic, 15  
clearing output protection, 49  
connections, 24  
connector, 21  
control keys  
Output, 43  
rating, 15  
setting output protection, 49  
setting the amplitude, 47  
setting the dc offset, 48  
setting the frequency, 48  
Output AC+DC, 38  
output checkout, 32  
output control keys  
Current, 42  
RI, 49  
rms current limit, 18  
rms voltage regulation, 18  
RS-232, 58  
connections  
interface commands, 29  
data format, 29  
Freq, 42  
handshake, 30  
88  
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Index  
interface cable, 30  
pinouts, 29  
equipment, 65  
rms current accuracy, 68  
setup, 66  
test record, 69  
—S—  
verification tests, 31  
voltage control, 14  
voltage regulation  
real-time, 18  
safety class, 12  
safety summary, 3  
safety warning, 12  
saving operating states, 58  
self-test, 31  
rms, 18  
selftest errors, 34  
sense connections, 25  
service guide, 12  
shift annunciator, 32  
shift key, 32  
Slew rates  
programming, 55  
SOA, 49  
—W—  
warranty, 2  
Waveform  
generation, 55  
wire  
current ratings, 25  
wiring considerations, 25  
SOA limit, 16  
specifications, 59  
Step, 50  
supplemental characteristics, 61  
SYSTem  
LOCal, 29  
REMote, 29  
RWLock, 29  
system errors, 81  
system keys, 39  
Address, 39  
Error, 39  
Interface, 39  
Local, 39  
RCL, 39  
Save, 39  
Shift, 39  
—T—  
transient voltage  
fixed, 50  
list, 50, 52  
pulse, 51  
step, 50  
transient voltage mode, 50  
trigger connections, 27  
Trigger delays, 53  
trigger IN, 27  
trigger OUT, 27  
trigger/list keys  
List, 45  
Trigger Control, 45  
turn-on checkout, 31, 67  
—V—  
verification, 32  
ac measurement accuracy, 67  
ac voltage programming, 67  
dc measurement accuracy, 68  
dc voltage programming, 68  
89  
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Agilent Sales and Support Offices  
For more information about Agilent Technologies test and measurement products, applications,  
services, and for a current sales office listing, visit our web site:  
You can also contact one of the following centers and ask for a test and measurement sales  
representative.  
United States:  
Latin America:  
Agilent Technologies  
Test and Measurement Call Center  
P.O. Box 4026  
Englewood, CO 80155-4026  
(tel) 1 800 452 4844  
Agilent Technologies  
Latin American Region Headquarters  
5200 Blue Lagoon Drive, Suite #950  
Miami, Florida 33126  
U.S.A.  
(tel) (305) 267 4245  
(fax) (305) 267 4286  
Canada:  
Australia/New Zealand:  
Agilent Technologies Canada Inc.  
5150 Spectrum Way  
Mississauga, Ontario  
L4W 5G1  
Agilent Technologies Australia Pty Ltd  
347 Burwood Highway  
Forest Hill, Victoria 3131  
(tel) 1-800 629 485 (Australia)  
(fax) (61 3) 9272 0749  
(tel) 1 877 894 4414  
(tel) 0 800 738 378 (New Zealand)  
(fax) (64 4) 802 6881  
Europe:  
Asia Pacific:  
Agilent Technologies  
Test & Measurement European Marketing Organisation  
P.O. Box 999  
1180 AZ Amstelveen  
The Netherlands  
Agilent Technologies  
24/F, Cityplaza One, 1111 King’s Road,  
Taikoo Shing, Hong Kong  
tel: (852)-3197-7777  
fax: (852)-2506-9284  
(tel) (31 20) 547 9999  
Japan:  
Agilent Technologies Japan Ltd.  
Measurement Assistance Center  
9-1, Takakura-Cho, Hachioji-Shi,  
Tokyo 192-8510, Japan  
(tel) (81) 426 56 7832  
(fax) (81) 426 56 7840  
Technical data is subject to change.  
90  
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Manual Updates  
The following updates have been made to this manual since the print revision indicated on the  
title page.  
4/15/00  
All references to HP have been changed to Agilent.  
All references to HP-IB have been changed to GPIB.  
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