EasyManuals Logo
Home>National Instruments>I/O Systems>NI 6323

National Instruments NI 6323 User Manual

National Instruments NI 6323
299 pages
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
Page #56 background imageLoading...
Page #56 background image
Chapter 4 Analog Input
X Series User Manual 4-10 ni.com
Software-Timed Acquisitions
With a software-timed acquisition, software controls the rate of the
acquisition. Software sends a separate command to the hardware to initiate
each ADC conversion. In NI-DAQmx, software-timed acquisitions are
referred to as having on-demand timing. Software-timed acquisitions are
also referred to as immediate or static acquisitions and are typically used
for reading a single sample of data.
Hardware-Timed Acquisitions
With hardware-timed acquisitions, a digital hardware signal (AI Sample
Clock) controls the rate of the acquisition. This signal can be generated
internally on your device or provided externally.
Hardware-timed acquisitions have several advantages over software-timed
acquisitions:
• The time between samples can be much shorter.
• The timing between samples is deterministic.
• Hardware-timed acquisitions can use hardware triggering.
Hardware-timed operations can be buffered or hardware-timed single point
(HWTSP). A buffer is a temporary storage in computer memory for
to-be-transferred samples.
• Buffered—In a buffered acquisition, data is moved from the DAQ
device’s onboard FIFO memory to a PC buffer using DMA before it is
transferred to application memory. Buffered acquisitions typically
allow for much faster transfer rates than HWTSP acquisitions because
data is moved in large blocks, rather than one point at a time.
One property of buffered I/O operations is the sample mode. The
sample mode can be either finite or continuous:
– Finite sample mode acquisition refers to the acquisition of a
specific, predetermined number of data samples. Once the
specified number of samples has been read in, the acquisition
stops. If you use a reference trigger, you must use finite sample
mode.
– Continuous acquisition refers to the acquisition of an u
nspecified
number
of samples. Instead of acquiri
ng a set number of data
samples and stopping, a continuous acquisition continues until
you stop the operation. Continuous acquisition is also referred to
as double-buffered or circular-buffered acquisition.
Artisan Technology Group - Quality Instrumentation ... Guaranteed | (888) 88-SOURCE | www.artisantg.com

Table of Contents

Questions and Answers:

Question and Answer IconNeed help?

Do you have a question about the National Instruments NI 6323 and is the answer not in the manual?

National Instruments NI 6323 Specifications

General IconGeneral
BrandNational Instruments
ModelNI 6323
CategoryI/O Systems
LanguageEnglish

Related product manuals