User's Guide
e-mail: [email protected]
PCI-DAS1001
PCI-DAS1002
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7.0 PCI-DAS1000 REGISTER DESCRIPTION
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
7.1 REGISTER OVERVIEW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
7.2 BADR0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
7.3 BADR1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
7.3.1 INTERRUPT / ADC FIFO REGISTER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
7.3.2 ADC CHANNEL MUX AND CONTROL REGISTER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
7.3.3 TRIGGER CONTROL/STATUS REGISTER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
7.3.4 CALIBRATION REGISTER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
7.3.5 DAC CONTROL/STATUS REGISTER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
7.4 BADR2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
7.4.1 ADC DATA REGISTER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
7.4.2 ADC FIFO CLEAR REGISTER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
7.5 BADR3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
7.5.1 ADC PACER CLOCK DATA AND CONTROL REGISTERS . . . . . . . . . 26
7.5.2 DIGITAL I/O DATA AND CONTROL REGISTERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
7.5.3 INDEX AND USER COUNTER 4 DATA AND CONTROL REGISTERS . 29
7.6 BADR4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
7.6.1 DAC0 DATA REGISTER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
7.6.2 DAC1 DATA REGISTER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
8.0 ELECTRICAL SPECIFICATIONS
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
8.1 ANALOG INPUT SECTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
8.2 ANALOG OUTPUT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
8.3 PARAELLEL DIGITAL INPUT/OUTPUT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
8.4 COUNTER SECTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
8.5 OTHER SPECIFICATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
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1.0 INTRODUCTION
The PCI-DAS1002 and PCI-DAS1001 are multifunction analog and digital I/O boards designed to operate in computers
with PCI bus accessory slots. The boards provide 16 single-ended/8 differential analog inputs with sample rates as high as
150 KHz. The boards also provide two analog output channels, 24-bits of parallel digital I/O and three counters. The only
difference between the boards are the analog input ranges. These are shown below.
PCI-DAS1002 Bipolar: +/- 10V, 5V, 2.5V and 1.25V
Unipolar: 0-10V, 0-5V, 0-2.5V and 0-1.25V
PCI-DAS1001 Bipolar: +/- 10V, 1.0V, 0.1V and 0.01V
Unipolar: 0-10V, 0-1.0V, 0-0.1V and 0-0.01V
The boards are fully plug-and-play, with no switches or jumpers to set. The boards are fully auto- and self-calibrating with
no potentiometers to adjust. All calibration is performed via software and on-board trim D/A converters.
The PCI-DAS1000 boards are fully supported by the powerful Universal Library software driver library as well as a wide
variety of application software packages including DAS Wizard and HP VEE.
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2.0 INSTALLATION
2.1 HARDWARE INSTALLATION
The PCI-DAS1001 and PCI-DAS1002 products are completely plug and play. Simply follow the steps shown below to
install your PCI hardware.
1. Turn your computer off, unplug it, open it up and insert the PCI board into any available PCI slot.
2. Close your computer up, plug it back in and turn it on.
3. Windows will automatically detect the board as it starts up. If the board's configuration file is already on the
system, it will load without user interaction. If the configuration file is not detected, you will be prompted to insert
the disk containing it. The required file is on the InstaCal or Universal Library disk you received with your board.
Simply insert the CD (or Disk 1 if your software is on floppy disk) into an appropriate drive and click on
CONTINUE. The appropriate file should then be automatically loaded and the PCI board will appear in the Device
Manager under DAS Component.
If the file is not found on the first attempt, use the browse function to select the drive that contains the InstaCAL
or Univesal Library disk, select the CBxx.INF file and then click on CONTINUE.
2.2 SOFTWARE INSTALLATION, WINDOWS 95, 98 & NT
2.2.1 INTRODUCTION
InstaCal is the installation, calibration and test software supplied with your data acquisition hardware. The complete Insta-
Cal package is also included with the Universal Library. If you have ordered the Universal Library, the Universal Library
CD/disks install both the library and InstaCal. The installation will create all required files and unpack the various pieces of
compressed software. To install InstaCal (and the Universal Library if applicable), simply run the SETUP.EXE file
contained on your CD, (or Disk 1 of the floppy disk set) and follow the on-screen instructions.
2.2.2 INSTALLATION OPTIONS
The Universal Library provides example programs for a wide variety of programming languages. If you are installing the
Universal Library, an "Installation Options" dialog box will allow you to select which languages' example programs are
loaded onto your computer. Select the desired example programs by checking the appropriate box(s).
2.2.3 FILE DEFAULT LOCATION
InstaCal will place all appropriate files in "C:CB" If you change this default location remember where the installed files are
placed as you may need to access them later.
2.2.4 INSTALLATION QUESTIONS
At the end of the installation process the installation wizard will ask a series of questions updating your startup files. Unless
you have knowledge to the contrary, simply accept the default (YES) when prompted. You will also be asked if you would
like to read an updated README file. If possible, please choose yes and take a look at the information in the file. It will
include the latest information regarding the software you are installing.
2.2.5 INSTALLATION COMPLETION
After the installation of InstaCal is complete you should restart your computer to take advantage of changes made to the
system.
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2.3 RUN InstaCal
Run the InstaCal program in order to test your board and configure it for run-time use. By configuring the board, you add
information to the configuration file, cb.cfg, that is used by the Universal Library and other third-party data acquisition
packages that use the Universal Library to access the board.
2.3.1 LAUNCHING InstaCAL
Launch InstaCal by going to your Start Menu then to Programs, then to ComputerBoards, and finally choosing InstaCal.
You may also launch the program by going to START>RUN and typing INSCAL32, or by finding the file named
"inscal32.exe" in your installation directory and double clicking it.
InstaCal will display a dialog box indicating the boards that have been detected in the system. If there are no other boards
currently installed by InstaCal, then the PCI-DAS1000 board will be assigned board number 0. Otherwise it will be
assigned the next available board number.
You can now view and change the board configuration by clicking the properties icon or selecting the Install\Configure
menu.
2.3.2 TESTING THE INSTALLATION
After you have run the install program, it is time to test the installation. The following section describes the InstaCal proce-
dure to test that your board is properly installed.
With InstaCal running:
1. Select the board you just installed.
2. Select the "Test" function.
Follow the instructions provided to test for proper board operation.
2.4 DOS and/or WINDOWS 3.1
Most users are now installing PCI Bus boards in systems with 32-bit operating systems (e.g., Windows 95, 98 or NT). The
PCI-CTR05 is not currently supported by the 16-bit library required to run under DOS or Windows 3.x.
Please contact us if your application is running under DOS or Windows 3.x.
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3.0 HARDWARE CONNECTIONS
3.1 CONNECTOR PIN DIAGRAM
The PCI-DAS1000 series employ a 100 pin I/O connector. Please make accurate notes and pay careful attention to wire
connections. In a large system a misplaced wire may create hours of work ‘fixing’ problems that do not exist before the
wiring error is found.
Analog G round
Analog Input C h 0 H igh
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
51 Digital A0
52 Digital A1
53 Digital A2
54 Digital A3
55 Digital A4
56 Digital A5
57 Digital A6
58 Digital A7
59 Digital B0
60 Digital B1
61 Digital B2
62 Digital B3
63 Digital B4
64 Digital B5
65 Digital B6
66 Digital B7
67 Digital C0
68 Digital C1
69 Digital C2
70 Digital C3
71 Digital C4
72 Digital C5
73 Digital C6
74 Digital C7
75 NC
Analog Input C h 0 Low / 8 High
Analog Input C h 1 H igh
Analog Input C h 1 Low / 9 High
Analog Input C h 2 H igh
Analog Input C h 2 Low / 10 H igh
Analog Input C h 3 H igh
Analog Input C h 3 Low / 11 High
Analog Input C h 4 H igh 10
Analog Input C h 4 Low / 12 H igh 11
Analog Input C h 5 H igh 12
Analog Input C h 5 Low / 13 H igh 13
Analog Input C h 6High 14
Analog Input C h 6 Low / 14 H igh 15
Analog Input C h 7 H igh 16
Analog Input C h 7 Low / 15 H igh 17
Analog Ground 18
NC 19
NC 20
NC 21
NC 22
NC 23
NC 24
NC 25
NC 26
76 NC
NC 27
77 NC
NC 28
78 NC
NC 29
79 NC
NC 30
80 CLK 6
NC 31
81 G ATE 6
82 O UT 6
NC 32
NC 33
83 NC
NC 34
84 NC
D/A GND 0 35
D/A OUT 0 36
D/A G ND 1 37
D/A OUT 1 38
CLK 4 39
GATE 4 40
OU T 4 41
A/D External Pacer 42
NC 43
85 CLK 5
86 G ATE 5
87 O UT 5
88 NC
89 PC G round
90 PC +12V
91 PC Ground
92 PC -12V
93 NC
NC 44
94 NC
A/D External Trigger 45
NC 46
95 A/D Internal Pacer Output
96 NC
NC 47
97 NC
PC +5V 48
NC 49
98 NC
99 NC
PC G round 50
100 PC Ground
PCI-DAS1000 C onnector D iagram
3.2 CONNECTING SIGNALS TO THE PCI-DAS1000
The 100 pin connector provides a far greater signal density than the traditional 37 pin D type connector. In exchange for
that density comes a far more complex cable and mating connector. The C100-FF-2 cable is a pair of 50 pin ribbon cables.
At one end they are joined together with a 100 pin connector. From the 100 pin connector designed to mate with the
PCI-DAS1000 connector, the two 50 pin ribbon cables diverge and are terminated at the other end with standard 50 pin
header connectors. A CIO-MINI50 screw terminal board is the ideal way to terminate real word signals and route them into
the PCI-DAS1000. The BNC16/8 series provides convenient BNC connections to each of the analog inputs..
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4.0 ANALOG CONNECTIONS
4.1 ANALOG INPUTS
Analog signal connection is one of the most challenging aspects of applying a data acquisition board. If you are an Analog
Electrical Engineer then this section is not for you, but if you are like most PC data acquisition users, the best way to
connect your analog inputs may not be obvious. Though complete coverage of this topic is well beyond the scope of this
manual, the following section provides some explanations and helpful hints regarding these analog input connections. This
section is designed to help you achieve the optimum performance from your PCI-DAS1000 series board.
Prior to jumping into actual connection schemes, you should have at least a basic understanding of Single-Ended/Differen-
tial inputs and system grounding/isolation. If you are already comfortable with these concepts you may wish to skip to the
next section (on wiring configurations).
4.1.1 Single-Ended and Differential Inputs
The PCI-DAS1000 provides either 8 differential or 16 single-ended input channels. The concepts of single-ended and
differential inputs are discussed in the following section.
Single-Ended Inputs
A single-ended input measures the voltage between the input signal and ground. In this case, in single-ended mode the
PCI-DAS1000 measures the voltage between the input channel and LLGND. The single-ended input configuration requires
only one physical connection (wire) per channel and allows the PCI-DAS1000 to monitor more channels than the (2-wire)
differential configuration using the same connector and onboard multiplexor. However, since the PCI-DAS1000 is measur-
ing the input voltage relative to its own low level ground, single-ended inputs are more susceptible to both EMI (Electro
Magnetic Interference) and any ground noise at the signal source. The following diagrams show the single-ended input
configuration.
CH IN
+
Input
To A /D
Am p
LL GND
-
I/O
Connector
Single-Ended Input
CH IN
+
Input
Am p
To A/D
Vs + Vg2 - Vg1
Vs
~
LL GND
-
g 2
g1
Any voltage differential between grounds
g1 and g2 shows up as an error signal
at the input amplifier
Single-ended input with Com m on M ode Voltage
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Differential Inputs
Differential inputs measure the voltage between two distinct input signals. Within a certain range (referred to as the common
mode range), the measurement is almost independent of signal source to PCI-DAS1000 ground variations. A differential
input is also much more immune to EMI than a single-ended one. Most EMI noise induced in one lead is also induced in the
other, the input only measures the difference between the two leads, and the EMI common to both is ignored. This effect is a
major reason there is twisted pair wire as the twisting assures that both wires are subject to virtually identical external influ-
ence. The diagram below shows a typical differential input configuration.
CH High
+
Input
To A/D
Amp
CH Low
-
LL GND
I/O
Connector
Differential Input
CH High
+
-
Vs
~
Input
A m p
To A/D
Vs
CH Low
LL GND
Vcm
Vcm = Vg2 - Vg1
Differential
Input
g1
g2
Common Mode Voltage (Vcm) is ignored
by differential input configuration. However,
note that Vcm + Vs must remain within
the amplifier’s common mode range of ±10V
Before moving on to the discussion of grounding and isolation, it is important to explain the concepts of common mode, and
common mode range (CM Range). Common mode voltage is depicted in the diagram above as Vcm. Though differential
inputs measure the voltage between two signals, without (almost) respect to the either signal’s voltages relative to ground,
there is a limit to how far away from ground either signal can go. Though the PCI-DAS1000 has differential inputs, it will
not measure the difference between 100V and 101V as 1 Volt (in fact the 100V would destroy the board!). This limitation
or common mode range is depicted graphically in the following diagram. The PCI-DAS1000 common mode range is +/- 10
Volts. Even in differential mode, no input signal can be measured if it is more than 10V from the board’s low level ground
(LLGND).
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+13V
+12V
+11V
+10V
+9V
+8V
+7V
+6V
+5V
+4V
+3V
+2V
+1V
Gray area represents common mode range
Both V+ and V- must always rem ain within
the common mode range relative to LL Gnd
With Vcm= +5VDC,
+Vs must be less than +5V, or the common mode range will be exceeded (>+10V)
Vcm
-1V
-2V
-3V
-4V
-5V
-6V
-7V
-8V
-9V
-10V
-11V
-12V
-13V
Vcm (Common Mode Voltage) = +5 Volts
4.1.2 System Grounds and Isolation
There are three scenarios possible when connecting your signal source to your PCI-DAS1000 board.
1. The PCI-DAS1000 and the signal source may have the same (or common)
ground. This signal source may be connected directly to the PCI-DAS1000.
2. The PCI-DAS1000 and the signal source may have an offset voltage
between their grounds (AC and/or DC). This offset it commonly
referred to a common mode voltage. Depending on the magnitude of
this voltage, it may or may not be possible to connect the PCI-DAS1000
directly to your signal source. We will discuss this topic further in a later
section.
3. The PCI-DAS1000 and the signal source may already have isolated
grounds. This signal source may be connected directly to the
PCI-DAS1000.
Which system do you have?
Try the following experiment. Using a battery powered voltmeter*, measure the voltage (difference) between the ground
signal at your signal source and at your PC. Place one voltmeter probe on the PC ground and the other on the signal source
ground. Measure both the AC and DC Voltages.
*If you do not have access to a voltmeter, skip the experiment and take a look a the following three sections. You may be able to identify
your system type from the descriptions provided.
If both AC and DC readings are 0.00 volts, you may have a system with common grounds. However, since voltmeters will
average out high frequency signals, there is no guarantee. Please refer to the section below titled Common Grounds.
If you measure reasonably stable AC and DC voltages, your system has an offset voltage between the grounds category.
This offset is referred to as a Common Mode Voltage. Please be careful to read the following warning and then proceed to
the section describing Common Mode systems.
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WARNING
If either the AC or DC voltage is greater than 10 volts, do not connect the PCI-DAS1000 to this signal
source. You are beyond the boards usable common mode range and will need to either adjust your
grounding system or add special Isolation signal conditioning to take useful measurements. A ground
offset voltage of more than 30 volts will likely damage the PCI-DAS1000 board and possibly your
computer. Note that an offset voltage much greater than 30 volts will not only damage your
electronics, but it may also be hazardous to your health.
This is such an important point, that we will state it again. If the voltage between the ground of your
signal source and your PC is greater than 10 volts, your board will not take useful measurements. If
this voltage is greater than 30 volts, it will likely cause damage, and may represent a serious shock
hazard! In this case you will need to either reconfigure your system to reduce the ground differentials,
or purchase and install special electrical isolation signal conditioning.
If you cannot obtain a reasonably stable DC voltage measurement between the grounds, or the voltage drifts around consid-
erably, the two grounds are most likely isolated. The easiest way to check for isolation is to change your voltmeter to it’s
ohm scale and measure the resistance between the two grounds. It is recommended that you turn both systems off prior to
taking this resistance measurement. If the measured resistance is more than 100 Kohm, it’s a fairly safe bet that your system
has electrically isolated grounds.
Systems with Common Grounds
In the simplest (but perhaps least likely) case, your signal source will have the same ground as the PCI-DAS1000. This
would typically occur when providing power or excitation to your signal source directly from the PCI-DAS1000. There may
be other common ground configurations, but it is important to note that any voltage between the PCI-DAS1000 ground and
your signal ground is a potential error voltage if you set up your system based on a common ground assumption.
As a safe rule of thumb, if your signal source or sensor is not connected directly to an LLGND pin on your PCI-DAS1000,
it’s best to assume that you do not have a common ground even if your voltmeter measured 0.0 Volts. Configure your
system as if there is ground offset voltage between the source and the PCI-DAS1000. This is especially true if you are using
high gains, since ground potentials in the sub millivolt range will be large enough to cause A/D errors, yet will not likely be
measured by your handheld voltmeter.
Systems with Common Mode (ground offset) Voltages
The most frequently encountered grounding scenario involves grounds that are somehow connected, but have AC and/or DC
offset voltages between the PCI-DAS1000 and signal source grounds. This offset voltage my be AC, DC or both and may
be caused by a wide array of phenomena including EMI pickup, resistive voltage drops in ground wiring and connections,
etc. Ground offset voltage is a more appropriate term to describe this type of system, but since our goal is to keep things
simple, and help you make appropriate connections, we’ll stick with our somewhat loose usage of the phrase Common
Mode.
Small Common Mode Voltages
If the voltage between the signal source ground and PCI-DAS1000 ground is small, the combination of the ground voltage
and input signal will not exceed the PCI-DAS1000’s +/-10V common mode range, (i.e. the voltage between grounds, added
to the maximum input voltage, stays within +/-10V), This input is compatible with the PCI-DAS1000 and the system may be
connected without additional signal conditioning. Fortunately, most systems will fall in this category and have a small
voltage differential between grounds.
Large Common Mode Voltages
If the ground differential is large enough, the PCI-DAS1000’s +/- 10V common mode range will be exceeded (i.e. the
voltage between PCI-DAS1000 and signal source grounds, added to the maximum input voltage you’re trying to measure
exceeds +/-10V). In this case the PCI-DAS1000 cannot be directly connected to the signal source. You will need to change
your system grounding configuration or add isolation signal conditioning. (Please look at our ISO-RACK and ISO-5B-
series products to add electrical isolation, or give our technical support group a call to discuss other options.)
NOTE
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Relying on the earth prong of a 120VAC for signal ground connections is not advised.. Different
ground plugs may have large and potentially even dangerous voltage differentials. Remember that the
ground pins on 120VAC outlets on different sides of the room may only be connected in the basement.
This leaves the possibility that the “ground” pins may have a significant voltage differential (especially
if the two 120 VAC outlets happen to be on different phases!)
PCI-DAS1000 and signal source already have isolated grounds
Some signal sources will already be electrically isolated from the PCI-DAS1000. The diagram below shows a typical
isolated ground system. These signal sources are often battery powered, or are fairly expensive pieces of equipment (since
isolation is not an inexpensive proposition), isolated ground systems provide excellent performance, but require some extra
effort during connections to assure optimum performance is obtained. Please refer to the following sections for further
details.
4.2 WIRING CONFIGURATIONS
Combining all the grounding and input type possibilities provides us with the following potential connection configurations.
The combinations along with our recommendations on usage are shown in the chart below.
Ground Category
Input Configuration
Our view
Recommended
Common Ground
Single-Ended Inputs
Common Ground
Differential Inputs
Acceptable
Common Mode
Voltage < +/-10V
Single-Ended Inputs
Not Recommended
Common Mode
Voltage < +/-10V
Differential Inputs
Recommended
Common Mode
Voltage > +/- 10V
Unacceptable without
adding Isolation
Single-Ended Inputs
Common Mode
Voltage > +/-10V
Unacceptable without
adding Isolation
Differential Inputs
Single-ended Inputs
Differential Inputs
Already Isolated Grounds
Acceptable
Already Isolated
Grounds
Recommended
The following sections depicts recommended input wiring schemes for each of the 8 possible input configuration/grounding
combinations.
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4.2.1 Common Ground / Single-Ended Inputs
Single-ended is the recommended configuration for common ground connections. However, if some of your inputs are
common ground and some are not, we recommend you use the differential mode. There is no performance penalty (other
than loss of channels) for using a differential input to measure a common ground signal source. However the reverse is not
true. The diagram below shows a recommended connection diagram for a common ground / single-ended input system
ꢀ
ꢁ
CH IN
+
-
Input
A m p
To A /D
LL GND
Optional wire
since signal source
and A/D board share
common ground
I/O
C onnector
A/D Board
Signal source and A/D board
sharing com mon ground connected
to single-ended input.
4.2.2 Common Ground / Differential Inputs
The use of differential inputs to monitor a signal source with a common ground is a acceptable configuration though it
requires more wiring and offers fewer channels than selecting a single-ended configuration. The diagram below shows the
recommended connections in this configuration.
l
o
gna
S
i
th
m
i
S
w
m
e
d
c
r
n
u
G
n
o
o
C
ꢀ
ꢁ
CH High
+
-
Input
A m p
To A /D
CH Low
LL GND
Optional wire
since signal source
and A/D board share
common ground
I/O
C onnector
A/D Board
Required connection
of LL GND to CH Low
Signal source and A/D board
sharing common ground connected
to differential input.
4.2.3 Common Mode Voltage < +/-10V / Single-Ended Inputs
This is not a recommended configuration. In fact, the phrase common mode has no meaning in a single-ended system and
this case would be better described as a system with offset grounds. Anyway, you are welcome to try this configuration, no
system damage should occur and depending on the overall accuracy you require, you may receive acceptable results.
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4.2.4 Common Mode Voltage < +/-10V / Differential Inputs
Systems with varying ground potentials should always be monitored in the differential mode. Care is required to assure that
the sum of the input signal and the ground differential (referred to as the common mode voltage) does not exceed the
common mode range of the A/D board (+/-10V on the PCI-DAS1000). The diagram below show recommended connections
in this configuration.
e
C
M
c
h
ur
o
n
o
V
S
m
e
m
d
gnal
o
o
i
e
S
g
t
a
t
i
l
o
w
ꢀ
G ND ꢁ
CH High
+
-
Input
A m p
To A /D
CH Low
LL GND
The voltage differential
between these grounds,
added to the m aximum
input signal m ust stay
within +/-10V
I/O
C onnector
A/D Board
Signal source and A/D board
with comm on mode voltage
connected to a differential input.
4.2.5 Common Mode Voltage > +/-10V
The PCI-DAS1000 will not directly monitor signals with common mode voltages greater than +/-10V. You will either need
to alter the system ground configuration to reduce the overall common mode voltage, or add isolated signal conditioning
between the source and your board.
Isolation
Barrier
n
a
een
o
lt
w
m
m
e
o
d
c
o
e
g
ge
m
ar
o
v
nal
&
d
r
a
g
e
i
s
c
o
b
D
/
A
bet
r
u
o
s
CH IN
G ND
+
-
Input
A m p
To A/D
LL GND
I/O
C onnector
When the voltage difference
between signal source and
A/D board ground is large
enough so the A/D board’s
com mon m ode range is
A/D Board
exceeded, isolated signal
conditioning m ust be added.
System with a Large Common Mode Voltage,
Connected to a Single-Ended Input
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Isolation
Barrier
on
m
ge com
m
ge
n
ar
a
t
l
o
v
l
A
de
gna
&
d
r
o
si
a
o
b
ee
D
/
w
t
be
e
c
r
u
o
s
ꢀ
G N D ꢁ
CH High
+
-
Input
A m p
To A /D
CH Low
LL GND
10
K
I/O
C onnector
W hen the voltage difference
between signal source and
A/D board ground is large
enough so the A/D board’s
common mode range is
A/D Board
10K is
a
recom m ended valu e. You m ay short LL G N D to C H Low
instead, b ut this w ill reduce your system ’s noise im m unity.
exceeded, isolated signal
conditioning must be added.
System with a Large Common Mode Voltage,
Connected to a Differential Input
4.2.6 Isolated Grounds / Single-Ended Inputs
Single-ended inputs can be used to monitor isolated inputs, though the use of the differential mode will increase your
system’s noise immunity. The diagram below shows the recommended connections is this configuration.
d
e
t
a
l
o
Is
l
s
a
n
g
i
s
e
c
r
u
o
ꢀ
ꢁ
CH IN
+
-
Input
Am p
To A/D
LL GND
I/O
Connector
A/D Board
Isolated Signal Source
Connected to a Single-Ended Input
4.2.7 Isolated Grounds / Differential Inputs
Optimum performance with isolated signal sources is assured with the use of the differential input setting. The diagram
below shows the recommend connections is this configuration.
12
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e
D
c
/
ur
o
n
d
r
S
a
a
y
o
d
gnal
B
a
.
i
d
S
e
t
A
a
l
d
o
s
I
e
r
l
A
ꢀ
G ND ꢁ
CH High
+
-
Input
A m p
To A /D
CH Low
LL GND
10 K
I/O
C onnector
A/D Board
These grounds are
electrically isolated.
10K is a recom m ended value. You m ay short LL G N D to C H Low
instead, but this will reduce your system ’s noise im m unity.
Already isolated signal source
and A/D board connected to
a differential input.
13
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5.0 PROGRAMMING & SOFTWARE APPLICATIONS
Your PCI-DAS1000 is supported by the powerful Universal Library. We strongly recommend that you take advantage of
the Universal Library as you software interface. The complexity of the the registers required for automatic calibration
combined with the PCI BIOS's dynamic allocation of addresses and internal resources makes the PCI-DAS1000 series very
challenging to program via direct register I/O operations. Direct I/O programming should be attempted only by very experi-
enced programmers.
Although the PCI-DAS1000 is part of the larger DAS family, there is no correspondence between register locations of the
PCI-DAS1000 and boards in the CIO-DAS16 family. Software written at the register level for the other DAS boards will
not work with the PCI-DAS1000. However, software written based on the Universal Library should work with the
PCI-DAS1000 with few or no changes.
5.1 PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES
The Universal Library provides complete access to the PCI-DAS1000 functions from the full range of Windows program-
ming languages. If you are planning to write programs, or would like to run the example programs for Visual Basic or any
other language, please turn now to the UniversalLibrary manual.
The opitional VIX Components package may greatly simplify your programming effort. VIX Components is a set of
programming tools based on a DLL interface to Windows languages. A set of VBX, OCX or ActiveX interfaces allows
point and click construction of graphical displays, analysis and control structures. Please see the catalog for a complete
description of the package.
5.2 PACKAGED APPLICATION PROGRAMS
Many packaged application programs, such as DAS Wizard and HP-VEE now have drivers for the PCI-DAS1000. If the
package you own does not appear to have drivers for the PCI-DAS1000 please fax or e-mail the package name and the
revision number from the install disks. We will research the package for you and advise how to obtain PCI-DAS1000
drivers.
Some application drivers are included with the Universal Library package, but not with the Application package. If you
have purchased an application package directly from the software vendor, you may need to purchase our Universal Library
and drivers. Please contact us for more information on this topic.
14
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6.0 SELF-CALIBRATION OF THE PCI-DAS1000
The PCI-DAS1000 is shipped fully-calibrated from the factory with cal coefficients stored in nvRAM. At run time, these
calibration factors are loaded into system memory and are automatically retrieved each time a different DAC/ADC range is
specified. The user has the option to recalibrate with respect to the factory-measured voltage standards at any time by
simply selecting the "Calibrate" option in InstaCal. Full calibration typically requires less than two minutes and requires no
user intervention.
6.1 CALIBRATION CONFIGURATION
6.1.1 Analog Inputs
The PCI-DAS1000 provides self-calibration of the analog source and measure systems thereby eliminating the need for
external equipment and user adjustments. All adjustments are made via 8-bit calibration DACs or 7-bit digital potentiome-
ters referenced to an on-board factory calibrated standard. Calibration factors are stored on the serial nvRAM..
A variety of methods are used to calibrate the different elements on the board. The analog front-end has several knobs to
turn. Offset calibration is performed in the instrumentation amplifier gain stage. Front-end gain adjustment is performed
via a variable attenuator/gain stage.
The analog output circuits are calibrated for both gain and offset. Offset adjustments for the analog output are made in the
output buffer section. The tuning range of this adjustment allows for max DAC and output buffer offsets. Gain calibration
of the analog outputs are performed via DAC reference adjustments.
Figure 1 below is a block diagram of the analog front-end calibration system:
Cal
Variable Gain
Ref
PGA
ADC
Offset Adj
7
Offset
8
Trim Dac
(Coarse)
Digital Offset Pot
Trim Dac
(Fine)
Figure 1
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6.1.2 Analog Outputs
The calibration scheme for the Analog Out section is shown in Figure 2 below. This circuit is duplicated for both DAC0
and DAC1
Analog-Out
12
DAC
Analog Out
Ref
Gain Adj
Trim Dac
(Coarse)
Trim Dac
(Fine)
Offset Adj
Trim Dac
Figure 2
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7.0 PCI-DAS1000 REGISTER DESCRIPTION
7.1 REGISTER OVERVIEW
PCI-DAS1000 operation registers are mapped into I/O address space. Unlike ISA bus designs, this board has several base
addresses each corresponding to a reserved block of addresses in I/O space. As we mention in our programming chapter,
we highly recommend customers use the Universal Library package. Direct register level programming should be attempted
only by extremely experienced register level programmers.
Of six Base Address Regions (BADR) available in the PCI 2.1 specification, five are implemented in this design and are
summarized as follows:
I/O Region
BADR0
BADR1
BADR2
BADR3
BADR4
Function
Operations
PCI Controller Operation Registers
General Control/Status Registers
ADC Data, FIFO Clear Registers
Pacer, Counter/Timer and DIO Registers
DAC Data Registers
32-Bit DWORD
16-Bit WORD
16-Bit WORD
8-Bit BYTE
16-Bit WORD
BADRn will likely be different on different machines. Assigned by the PCI BIOS, these Base Address values cannot be
guaranteed to be the same even on subsequent power-on cycles of the same machine. All software must interrogate BADR0
at run-time with a READ_CONFIGURATION_WORD instruction to determine the BADRn values. Please see the "1997
AMCC S5933 PCI Controller Data Book" for more information.
7.2 BADR0
BADR0 is reserved for the AMCC S5933 PCI Controller operations. There is no reason to access this region of I/O space
for most PCI-DAS1000 users. The installation procedures and Universal Library access all required information in this
area. Unless you are writing direct register level software for the PCI-DAS1000, you will not need to be concerned with
BADR0 address.
7.3 BADR1
The I/O region defined by BADR1 contains 5 control and status registers for ADC, DAC, interrupt and Autocal operations.
This region supports 16-bit WORD operations.
7.3.1 INTERRUPT / ADC FIFO REGISTER
BADR1+ 0: Interrupt Control, ADC status. A read/write register.
WRITE
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
-
ADFLCL
-
-
-
-
-
INTCL
EOACL
-
EOAIE
-
INTE
INT1
INT0
-
Write operations to this register allow the user to select interrupt sources, enable interrupts, clear interrupts as well as ADC
FIFO flags. The following is a description of the Interrupt/ADC FIFO Register:
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INT[1:0]
General Interrupt Source selection bits.
INT1
INT0
Source
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
Not Defined
End of Channel Scan
AD FIFO Half Full
AD FIFO Not Empty
INTE
Enables interrupt source selected via the INT[1:0] bits.
1 = Selected interrupt Enabled
0 = Selected interrupt Disabled
EOAIE
Enables End-of-Acquisition interrupt. Used during FIFO'd ADC operations to indicate that the desired
sample size has been gathered.
1= Enable EOA interrupt
0 = Disable EOA interrupt
EOACL
INTCL
A write-clear to reset EOA interrupt status.
1 = Clear EOA interrupt.
0 = No effect.
A write-clear to reset
selected interrupt status.
INT[1:0]
1 = Clear
interrupt
INT[1:0]
0 = No effect.
ADFLCL
A write-clear to reset latched ADC FIFO Full status.
Clear ADC FIFO Full latch.
1
=
0 = No Effect.
NOTE: It is not necessary to reset any write-clear bits after they are set.
READ
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
-
-
LADFUL ADNE
ADNEI
ADHFI
EOBI
-
INT
EOAI
-
-
-
-
-
-
Read operations to this register allow the user to check status of the selected interrupts and ADC FIFO flags. The following
is a description of Interrupt / ADC FIFO Register Read bits:
EOAI Status bit of ADC FIFO End-of-Acquisition interrupt
1 = Indicates an EOA interrupt has been latched.
0 = Indicates an EOA interrupt has not occurred.
INT
Status bit of General interrupt selected via
these interrupts has occurred.
bits. This bit indicates that any one of
INT[1:0]
1 = Indicates a General interrupt has been latched.
0 = Indicates a General interrupt has not occurred.
EOBI Status bit ADC End-of-Burst interrupt. Only valid for ADC Burst Mode enabled.
1 = Indicates an EOB interrupt has been latched.
0 = Indicates an EOB interrupt has not occurred.
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ADHFI
ADNEI
Status bit of ADC FIFO Half-Full interrupt. Used during REP INSW operations.
1 = Indicates an ADC Half-Full interrupt has been latched. FIFO has been filled
with more than 255 samples.
0 = Indicates an ADC Half-Full interrupt has not occurred. FIFO has not yet
exceeded 1/2 of its total capacity.
Status bit of ADC FIFO Not-Empty interrupt. Used to indicate ADC conversion
complete in single conversion applications.
1 = Indicates an ADC FIFO Not-Empty interrupt has been latched and that
one data word may be read from the FIFO.
0 = Indicates an ADC FIFO Not-Empty interrupt has not occurred. FIFO has
been cleared, read until empty or ADC conversion still in progress.
ADNE Real-time status bit of ADC FIFO Not-Empty status signal.
1 = Indicates ADC FIFO has at least one word to be read.
0 = Indicates ADC FIFO is empty.
LADFUL
Status bit of ADC FIFO FULL status. This bit is latched.
1 = Indicates the ADC FIFO has exceeded full state. Data may have been lost.
0 = Indicates non-overflow condition of ADC FIFO.
7.3.2 ADC CHANNEL MUX AND CONTROL REGISTER
BADR1 + 2
This register sets channel mux HI/LO limits, ADC gain, offset and pacer source.
A Read/Write register.
WRITE
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
-
-
ADPS1
ADPS0
UNIBIP SEDIFF
GS1
GS0
CHH8
CHH4
CHH2
CHH1
CHL8
CHL4
CHL2
CHL1
CHL8-CHL1, CHH8-CHH1
When these bits are written, the analog input multiplexers are set to the channel specified by CHL8-CHL1. After each
conversion, the input multiplexers increment to the next channel, reloading to the "CHL" start channel after the "CHH"
stop channel is reached. LO and HI channels are the decode of the 4-bit binary patterns.
GS[1:0]
These bits determine the ADC range as indicated below.
GS1
GS0
Range
10V
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
5V
2.5V
1.25V
SEDIFF
UNIBIP
Selects measurement configuration for the Analog Front-End.
1 = Analog Front-End in Single-Ended Mode. This mode supports
up to 16 channels.
0 = Analog Front-End in Differential Mode. This mode supports
up to 8 channels.
Selects offset configuration for the Analog Front-End.
1 = Analog Front-End Unipolar for selected range
0 = Analog Front-End Bipolar for selected range.
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The following tables summarizes all possible Offset/Range configurations:
PCI-DAS1002
UNIBIP
GS1
GS0
Input Range
Input Gain
Measurement
Resolution
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
1
2
4
8
1
2
4
8
4.88 mV
2.44 mV
1.22 mV
610 uV
±10V
± 5V
±2.5V
±1.25V
0-10V
0-5V
2.44 mV
1.22 mV
610 uV
0-2.5V
0-1.25V
305 uV
PCI-DAS1001
UNIBIP
GS1
GS0
Input Range
Input Gain
Measurement
Resolution
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
1
10
4.88 mV
488 uV
48.8 uV
4.88 uV
2.44 mV
244 uV
24.4 uV
2.44 uV
±10V
± 1V
100
1,000
1
±0.1V
±0.01V
0-10V
0-1V
10
100
1,000
0-0.1V
0-0.01V
ADPS[1:0] These bits select the ADC Pacer Source. Maximum Internal/External Pacer
frequency is 330KHz.
ADPS1
ADPS0
Pacer Source
SW Convert
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
82C54 Counter/Timer
External Falling
External Rising
Note: For ADPS[1:0] = 00 case, SW conversions are initiated
via a word write to BADR2 + 0. Data is 'don't care.'
READ
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
-
EOC
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
EOC
Real-time, non-latched status of ADC End-of-Conversion signal.
1 = ADC DONE
0 = ADC BUSY
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7.3.3 TRIGGER CONTROL/STATUS REGISTER
BADR1 + 4
This register provides control bits for all ADC trigger modes. A Read/Write register.
WRITE
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
-
-
C0SRC
FFM0
ARM
-
-
-
XTRCL
PRTRG BURSTE
TGEN
-
-
TS1
TS0
TS[1:0]
These bits select one-of-two possible ADC Trigger Sources:
TS1
TS0
Source
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
Disabled
SW Trigger
External (Digital)
Not Defined
Note: TS[1:0] should be set to 0 while setting up Pacer source and count values.
TGEN This bit is used to enable External Trigger function
1 = External rising-edge Digital Trigger enabled.
0 = External Digital Trigger has no effect.
Note that the external trigger requires proper setting of the TS[1:0] and TGEN
bits. Once these bits are set, the next rising edge will start a Paced ADC conversion.
Subsequent triggers will have no effect until external trigger flop is cleared (XTRCL).
BURSTE
PRTRG
This bit enables 330KHz ADC Burst mode. Start/Stop channels are selected via
the CHLx, CHHx bits in ADC CTRL/STAT register at BADR1 + 2.
1 = Burst Mode enabled
0 = Burst Mode disabled
This bit enables ADC Pre-trigger Mode. This bit works with the ARM and FFM0
bits when using Pre-trigger mode. See document "PCI-DAS1000 ADC Modes"
for programming guidelines.
1 = Enable Pre-trigger Mode
0 = Disable Pre-trigger Mode
XTRCL
ARM,
A write-clear to reset the
1 = Clear XTRIG status.
0 = No Effect.
XTRIG
flip-flop.
FFM0 These bits works in conjunction with
during FIFO'd ADC operations.
See document "PCI-DAS1000 ADC Modes" for programming guidelines.
PRTRG
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The table below provides a summary of bit settings and operation.
PRTRG FFM0
ARM is set...
FIFO Mode
Sample CTR
Starts on...
0
0
Via SW when
# Samples >1 FIFO
Normal Mode
----------------------------------
1/2 FIFO < # Samples < 1 FIFO
Normal Mode
remaining count <1024
------------------------
Via SW immediately
ADHF
0
1
1
0
ADC Pacer
Via SW immediately
# Samples <1/2 FIFO
Normal Mode
Via SW when
# Samples >1 FIFO
Pre-Trigger Mode
----------------------------------
1/2 FIFO < # Samples < 1 FIFO
Pre-Trigger Mode
remaining count <1024
------------------------
Via SW immediately
ADHF
1
1
XTRIG
Via SW immediately
# Samples <1/2 FIFO,
Pre-Trigger Mode
C0SRC
This bit allows the user to select the clock source for user Counter 0.
1 = Internal 10MHz oscillator
0 = External clock source input via CTR0CLK pin on 100p connector.
READ
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
-
-
-
INDX_GT
-
-
-
-
XTRIG
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
XTRIG
1 = External Trigger flip-flop has been set. This bit is write-cleared.
0 = External Trigger flip-flop reset. No trigger has been received.
INDX_GT
1 = Pre-trigger index counter has completed its count.
0 = Pre-trigger index counter has not been gated on or has not yet completed its count.
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7.3.4 CALIBRATION REGISTER
See "Calibrating The PCI-DAS1000" document for additional programming details.
BADR1 + 6
This register controls all autocal operations. This is a Write-only register.
WRITE
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
SDI
CALEN
CSRC2
CSRC1
CSRC0
-
SEL7376 SEL8800
SEL8800
This bit enables the 8-bit trim DACs for the following circuits:
DAC Channel
Cal Function
Fine Gain
Coarse Gain
Offset
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
DAC0
DAC0
DAC0
DAC1
DAC1
DAC1
Offset
Fine Gain
Coarse Gain
Coarse Offset
Fine Offset
ADC
ADC
SEL7376
This bit latches the 7-bit serial data stream into the AD7376 digital potentiometer
(10KOhm). The AD7376 is used for analog front-end gain calibration.
CSRC[2:0] These bits select the different calibration sources available to the ADC front end.
CSRC2
CSRC1
CSRC0
Cal Source
AGND
7.0V
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
3.5V
1.75V
0.875V
8.6mV
VDAC0
VDAC1
CALEN
This bit is used to enable Cal Mode.
1 = Selected Cal Source,
, is fed into Analog Channel 0.
CSRC[2:0]
0 = Analog Channel 0 functions as normal input.
SDI Serial Data In. This bit is used to set serial address/data stream for the
DAC8800 TrimDac and 7376 digital potentiometer. Used in conjunction
with
and
bits.
SEL7376
SEL8800
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7.3.5 DAC CONTROL/STATUS REGISTER
BADR1 + 8
This register selects the DAC gain/range and update modes. This is a Write-only register.
WRITE
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
-
-
-
-
-
DAC1R1 DAC1R0 DAC0R1 DAC0R0 MODE
-
-
-
-
-
DACEN
DACEN
This bit enables the Analog Out features of the board.
1 = DAC0/1 enabled.
0 = DAC0/1 disabled.
The power-on state of this bit is 0.
MODE
This bit determines the analog output mode of operation.
1 = Both DAC0 and DAC1 updated with data written to DAC0 data register.
0 = DACn updated with data written to DACn data register.
The power-on state of this bit is 0.
DACnR[1:0]
These bits select the independent gains/ranges for either DAC0 or DAC1.
n=0 for DAC0 and n=1 for DAC1.
DACnR1
DACnR0
Range
LSB Size
2.44mV
4.88mV
610uV
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
Bipolar 5V
Bipolar 10V
Unipolar 5V
Unipolar 10V
1.22mV
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7.4 BADR2
The I/O Region defined by BADR2 contains the ADC Data register and the ADC FIFO clear
register.
7.4.1 ADC DATA REGISTER
BADR2 + 0
ADC Data register.
WRITE
Writing to this register is only valid for SW initiated conversions. The ADC Pacer source must
be set to 00 via the ADPS[1:0] bits. A null write to BADR2 + 0 will begin a single conversion.
Conversion status may be determined in two ways. The
bit in BADR1 + 0 may be polled
EOC
until true or
(the AD FIFO not-empty interrupt) may be used to signal that the ADC
ADNEI
conversion is complete and the data word is present in the FIFO.
READ
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
0
0
0
0
AD11 AD10 AD9
AD8
AD7
AD6
AD5
AD4
AD3
AD2
AD1
AD0
LSB
MSB
AD[11:0]
This register contains the current ADC data word. Data format is dependent upon
offset mode:
Bipolar Mode Offset Binary Coding
:
000 h = -FS
7FFh = Mid-scale (0V)
FFFh = +FS - 1LSB
Unipolar Mode Straight Binary Coding
:
000 h = -FS (0V)
7FFh = Mid-scale (+FS/2)
FFFh = +FS - 1LSB
7.4.2 ADC FIFO CLEAR REGISTER
BADR2 + 2
ADC FIFO Clear register. A Write-only register. A write to this address location clears
the ADC FIFO. Data is don't care. The ADC FIFO should be cleared before all new
ADC operations.
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7.5 BADR3
The I/O Region defined by BADR3 contains data and control registers for the ADC Pacer, Pre/Post-Trigger Counters, User
Counters and Digital I/O bytes. The PCI-DAS1000 has two 8254 counter/timer devices. These are referred to as 8254A
and 8254B and are assigned as shown below:
Device
8254A
8254A
8254A
8254B
Counter #
Function
ADC Post-Trigger Sample Counter
ADC Pacer Lower Divider
ADC Pacer Upper Divider
0
1
2
0
User Counter #3 & ADC Pre-Trigger Index
Counter
8254B
8254B
1
2
User Counter #4
User Counter #5
All reads/writes to BADR3 are byte operations.
7.5.1 ADC PACER CLOCK DATA AND CONTROL REGISTERS
8254A COUNTER 0 DATA - ADC POST TRIGGER CONVERSION COUNTER
BADR3 + 0
READ/WRITE
7
6
5
4
2
3
1
0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
Counter 0 is used to stop the acquisition when the desired number of samples have been gathered. It essentially is gated on
when a 'residual' number of conversions remain. The main counting of samples is done by the Interrupt Service Routine,
which will increment each time by 'packets' equal to 1/2 FIFO. Generally the value loaded into Counter 0 is N mod 1024,
where N is the total count, or the post trigger count, since Total count is not known when pre-trigger is active. Counter 0
will be enabled by use of the
operated in Mode 0.
bit (BADR1 + 4) when the next-to-last 1/2-full interrupt is processed. Counter 0 is to
ARM
8254A COUNTER 1 DATA - ADC PACER DIVIDER LOWER
BADR3 + 1
READ/WRITE
7
6
5
4
2
3
1
0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
26
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8254A COUNTER 2 DATA - ADC PACER DIVIDER UPPER
BADR3 + 2
READ/WRITE
7
6
5
4
2
3
1
0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
Counter 1 provides the lower 16 bits of the 32-bit pacer clock divider. Its output is fed to the clock input of Counter 2
which provides the upper 16-bits of the pacer clock divider. The clock input to Counter 1 is a precision 10MHz oscillator
source.
Counter 2 output is called the 'Internal Pacer' and can be selected by software to the be the ADC Pacer source. Counters 1
& 2 should be configured to operate in 8254 Mode 2.
ADC 8254 CONTROL REGISTER
BADR3 + 3
WRITE ONLY
7
6
5
4
2
3
1
0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
The control register is used to set the operating Modes of 8254 Counters 0,1 & 2. A counter is configured by writing the
correct Mode information to the Control Register followed by count written to the specific Counter Register.
The Counters on the 8254 are 16-bit devices. Since the interface to the 8254 is only 8-bits wide, Count data is written to the
Counter Register as two successive bytes. First the low byte is written, then the high byte. The Control Register is 8-bits
wide. Further information can be obtained on the 8254 data sheet, available from Intel or Harris.
7.5.2 DIGITAL I/O DATA AND CONTROL REGISTERS
he 24 DIO lines on the PCI-DAS1000 are grouped as three byte-wide I/O ports. Port assignment and functionality is identi-
cal to that of the industry standard 8255 Peripheral Interface. Please see the Intel or Harris data sheets for more
information.
DIO PORT A DATA
BADR3 + 4
PORT A may be configured as an 8-bit I/O channel.
READ/WRITE
7
6
5
4
2
3
1
0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
DIO PORT B DATA
BADR3 + 5
PORT B may be configured as an 8-bit I/O channel. Its functionality is identical to that of
PORT A.
READ/WRITE
7
6
5
4
2
3
1
0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
27
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DIO PORT C DATA
BADR3 + 6
PORT C may be configured as an 8-bit port of either input or output, or it may be split into two independent 4-bit ports of
input or output. When split into two 4-bit I/O ports, D[3:0]
make up the lower nibble, D[7:4] comprise the upper nibble. Although it may be split, every
write to Port C is a byte operation. Unwanted information must be ANDed out during reads
and writes must be ORd with current value of the other 4-bit port.
READ/WRITE
7
6
5
4
2
3
1
0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
DIO CONTROL REGISTER
BADR3 + 7
The DIO Control register is used configure Ports A,B and C as inputs or outputs. Operation is identical to that of the 8255
in Mode 0.
WRITE
7
6
5
4
2
3
1
0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
The following table summarizes the possible I/O Port configurations for the PCI-DAS1000
DIO operatin in MODE 0:
D4
D3 D1 D0
PORT A
PORT C
UPPER
PORT B
PORT C
LOWER
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
OUT
OUT
OUT
OUT
OUT
OUT
OUT
OUT
IN
OUT
OUT
OUT
OUT
IN
OUT
OUT
IN
OUT
IN
OUT
IN
IN
OUT
OUT
IN
OUT
IN
IN
IN
OUT
IN
IN
IN
OUT
OUT
OUT
OUT
IN
OUT
OUT
IN
OUT
IN
IN
IN
OUT
IN
IN
IN
IN
OUT
OUT
IN
OUT
IN
IN
IN
IN
IN
OUT
IN
IN
IN
IN
28
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7.5.3 INDEX and USER COUNTER 4 DATA AND CONTROL REGISTERS
8254B COUNTER 0 DATA - ADC PRE-TRIGGER INDEX COUNTER(or user counter 4)
BADR3 + 8
READ/WRITE
7
6
5
4
2
3
1
0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
Counter 0 of the 8254B device is a shared resource on the PCI-DAS1000. When not in ADC pre-trigger mode, the clock,
gate and output lines of Counter 0 are available to the user at the 100 pin connector as user counter 4. The 8254's Counter 0
clock source is SW selectable via the C0SRC bit in BADR1+4.
When in ADC Pre-trigger mode, this counter is used as the ADC Pre-Trigger index counter. This counter serves to mark the
boundary between pre- and post-trigger samples when the ADC is operating in Pre-Trigger Mode. The External ADC
Trigger flip flop gates Counter 0 on; the ADC FIFO Half-Full signal gates it off. Knowing the desired number of post-
trigger samples, software can then calculate how may 1/2 FIFO data packets need to be collected and what corresponding
residual sample count needs to be written to BADR3 + 0.
8254B COUNTER 1 DATA - USER COUNTER #5
BADR3 + 9
READ/WRITE
7
6
5
4
2
3
1
0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
The clock, gate and output lines of Counter 1 are available to the user at the 100 pin connector as user counter 5. The
8254's Counter 1 clock source is always external and must be provided by the user. The buffered version of the internal
10MHz clock available at the user connector may be used as the
clock source.
8254B COUNTER 2 DATA - USER COUNTER #6
BADR3 + Ah
READ/WRITE
7
6
5
4
2
3
1
0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
The clock, gate and output lines of Counter 2 are available to the user at the 100 pin connector as user counter 6. The
8254's Counter 2 clock source is always external and must be provided by the user. The buffered version of the internal
10MHz clock available at the user connector may be used as the clock source.
29
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8254B CONTROL REGISTER
BADR3 + Bh
WRITE ONLY
7
6
5
4
2
3
1
0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
The control register is used to set the operating Modes of 8254B Counters 0,1 & 2. A counter is configured by writing the
correct Mode information to the Control Register, then the proper count data must be written to the specific Counter Regis-
ter.
The Counters on the 8254 are 16-bit devices. Since the interface to the 8254 is only 8-bits wide, Count data is written to the
Counter Register as two successive bytes. First the low byte is written, then the high byte. The Control Register is 8-bits
wide. Further information can be obtained on the 8254 data sheet, available from Intel or Harris.
30
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7.6 BADR4
The I/O Region defined by BADR4 contains the DAC0 and DAC1 data registers.
7.6.1 DAC0 DATA REGISTER
BADR4 + 0
WRITE
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
DAC0(11) DAC0(10) DAC0(9) DAC0(8) DAC0(7) DAC0(6) DAC0(5) DAC0(4) DAC0(3) DAC0(2) DAC0(1) DAC0(0)
-
-
-
-
MSB
LSB
Writing to this register will initiate data conversion on DAC0. If the
bit in BADR1+8
MODE
is set, writes to this register will provide a simultaneous update of both DAC0 and DAC1 with the data written to this regis-
ter. The data format is dependent upon the offset mode described below:
Bipolar Mode: Offset Binary Coding
000 h = -FS
7FFh = Mid-scale (0V)
FFFh = +FS - 1LSB
Unipolar Mode Straight Binary Coding
:
000 h = -FS (0V)
7FFh = Mid-scale (+FS/2)
FFFh = +FS - 1LSB
7.6.2 DAC1 DATA REGISTER
BADR4 + 2
WRITE
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
DAC1(11) DAC1(10) DAC1(9) DAC1(8) DAC1(7) DAC1(6) DAC1(5) DAC1(4) DAC1(3) DAC1(2) DAC1(1) DAC1(0)
-
-
-
-
MSB
LSB
Writing to this register will initiate data conversion on DAC1. If the
is set, writes to this register will have no effect
bit in BADR1+8
MODE
31
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8.0 ELECTRICAL SPECIFICATIONS
(Typical specifications for 25 DegC unless otherwise specified.)
8.1 ANALOG INPUT SECTION
A/D converter type
Resolution
7800
12 bits
Programmable ranges
PCI-DAS1001
±10V, ±1V, ±0.1V, ±0.01V, 0 - 10V, 0 - 1V, 0 - 0.1V, 0 - 0.01V
±10V, ±5V, ±2.5V, ±1.0V, 0 - 10V, 0 - 5V, 0 - 2.5V, 0 - 1.0
PCI-DAS1002
A/D pacing
Programmable: internal counter or external source (A/D External Pacer)
or software polled
Burstmode
A/D Trigger sources
Software selectable option, rate = 6.67µs
External digital (A/D External Trigger)
A/D Triggering Modes
Digital:
Software enabled, rising edge, hardware trigger
Unlimited pre- and post-trigger samples. Total # of samples must be >
512.
Pre-trigger:
Data transfer
From 1024 sample FIFO via REPINSW, interrupt or software polled
Polarity
Unipolar/Bipolar, software selectable
Number of channels
8 differential or 16 single-ended, software selectable
A/D conversion time
Throughput
3µs
150KHz min
Relative Accuracy
±1.5LSB
Differential Linearity error
Integral Linearity error
Gain Error (10V,1V and 0.1V Ranges)
Gain Error (0.01V Range)
±0.75 LSB
±0.5 LSB typ, ±1.5 LSB max
± 0.02% of reading Max
± 0.4% of reading Max
No missing codes guaranteed
Gain drift (A/D specs)
Zero drift (A/D specs)
12 bits
±6ppm/°C
±1ppm/°C
Common Mode Range
CMRR @ 60Hz
±10V
70dB
Input leakage current
Input impedance
Absolute maximum input voltage
200nA
10Meg Ohms Min
±15V
32
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8.2 ANALOG OUTPUT
D/A type
AD7847AR
Resolution
12 bits
Number of channels
Output Ranges
2
±10V, ±5V, 0-5V, 0-10V. Each channel independently programmable.
D/A pacing
Software
Data transfer
Programmed I/O.
Offset error
Gain error
Differential nonlinearity
Integral nonlinearity
Monotonicity
±600µV max, all ranges (calibrated)
±0.02% FSR max (calibrated)
±1LSB max
±1LSB max
12 bits
D/A Gain drift
±2 ppm/°C max
D/A Bipolar offset drift
D/A Unipolar offset drift
±5 ppm/°C max
±5 ppm/°C max
Throughput
Settling time (to .01% of 10V step)
Slew Rate
PC dependent
4µs typ
7V/µS
Current Drive
Output short-circuit duration
Output Coupling
±5 mA min
25 mA indefinite
DC
Amp Output Impedance
0.1 Ohms max
Miscellaneous
Power up and reset, all DAC's cleared to 0 volts, ±200mV
8.3 PARAELLEL DIGITAL INPUT/OUTPUT
Digital Type
82C55A
Configuration
Number of channels
Output High
2 banks of 8, 2 banks of 4, programmable by bank as input or output
24 I/O
3.0 volts @ -2.5mA min
Output Low
0.4volts @ 2.5 mA max
Input High
Input Low
Power-up / reset state
2.0 volts min, Vcc+0.5 volts absolute max
0.8 volts max, GND-0.5 volts absolute min
Input mode (high impedance)
Interrupts
Interrupt enable
Interrupt sources
INTA# - mapped to IRQn via PCI BIOS at boot-time
Programmable
Residual counter, End-of-channel-scan, AD-FIFO-not-empty,
AD-FIFO-half-full
33
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8.4 COUNTER SECTION
Counter type
82C54
Configuration
Two 82C54 devices. 3 down counters per 82C54, 16 bits each
82C54A:
Counter 0 - ADC residual sample counter.
Source: ADC Clock.
Gate:
Internal programmable source.
Output: End-of-Acquisition interrupt.
Counter 1 - ADC Pacer Lower Divider
Source: 10 MHz oscillator
Gate:
Tied to Counter 2 gate, programmable source.
Output: Chained to Counter 2 Clock.
Counter 2 - ADC Pacer Upper Divider
Source: Counter 1 Output.
Gate:
Tied to Counter 1 gate, programmable source.
Output: ADC Pacer clock (if software selected), available at connector
82C54B:
Counter 0 - Pretrigger Mode
Source: ADC Clock.
Gate:
External trigger
Output: End-of-Acquisition interrupt.
Counter 0 - User Counter 4 (when in non-Pretrigger Mode)
Source: User input at 100pin connector (CLK4) or internal 10MHz
(software selectable)
Gate:
User input at 100pin connector (GATE4).
Output: Available at 100pin connector (OUT4).
Counter 1 - User Counter 5
Source: User input at 100pin connector (CLK5).
Gate:
User input at 100pin connector (GATE5).
Output: Available at 100pin connector (OUT5).
Counter 2 - User Counter 6
Source: User input at 100pin connector (CLK6).
Gate:
User input at 100pin connector (GATE6).
Output: Available at 100pin connector (OUT6).
Clock input frequency
High pulse width (clock input)
Low pulse width (clock input)
Gate width high or low
Input low voltage
10Mhz max
30ns min
50ns min
50ns min
0.8V max
2.0V min
0.4V max
Input high voltage
Output low voltage
Output high voltage
3.0V min
8.5 OTHER SPECIFICATIONS
Power consumption
+5V Operating (A/D converting to FIFO) 0.8A typical, 1.0A max
Environmental
Operating temperature range
0 to 70°C
Storage temperature range
Humidity
-40 to 100°C
0 to 90% non-condensing
34
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EC Declaration of Conformity
PCI-DAS1000
High speed analog I/O board for the PCI bus
Part Number
Description
to which this declaration relates, meets the essential requirements, is in conformity with, and CE marking has been
applied according to the relevant EC Directives listed below using the relevant section of the following EC standards
and other normative documents:
: Essential requirements relating to electromagnetic compatibility.
EU EMC Directive 89/336/EEC
: Limits and methods of measurements of radio interference characteristics of information
EU 55022 Class B
technology equipment.
: EC generic immunity requirements.
EN 50082-1
: Electrostatic discharge requirements for industrial process measurement and control equipment.
IEC 801-2
IEC 801-3
IEC 801-4
: Radiated electromagnetic field requirements for industrial process measurements and control equipment.
: Electrically fast transients for industrial process measurement and control equipment.
Carl Haapaoja, Director of Quality Assurance
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