
The
General
Function
Menus
Limit
T
est
Menu
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
Store
Waveforms
Store
waveforms
sends
a
copy
of
a
channel,
function,
or
memory
to
the
selected
destination
of
o,
memory
,
or
disk.
W
aveform
is
not
an
image
copy
of
the
waveform
area.
A
stored
waveform
contains
the
vertical
and
horizontal
scaling
factors
which
allows
you
to
bring
the
waveform
back
into
the
instrument
for
measurement
or
rescaling.
W
aveforms
are
stored
on
a
source-by-source
basis
.
F
or
example
,
you
can
store
channel
1
to
a
le
and
channel
2
to
a
memory
.
NNNNNNNNNNN
Off
O
means
that
the
waveform
data
is
not
stored,
printed,
or
retained.
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
Memory
Memory
stores
a
copy
of
what
the
Source
softkey
is
set
to
,
to
one
of
the
four
waveform
memories;
the
same
waveform
memories
that
are
accessed
by
the
W
aveform
menu.
Because
a
waveform
memory
can
contain
only
one
waveform
at
a
time
,
a
waveform
memory
is
best
used
when
you
are
looking
for
one
failure
.
Y
ou
can
send
either
the
waveform
that
failed
or
another
waveform
to
the
waveform
memory
.
NNNNNNNNNNNNNN
Disk
Disk
stores
a
copy
of
the
waveform
to
a
disk.
The
description
for
\Disk"
under
\
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
Fail
Action
"
applies
.
Refer
to
\W
aveform
Menu"
for
additional
details
on
waveform
memories
.
K
ey
Path
4
Limit
test
5
N
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
Store
wforms
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
Destination
NNNNNNNNNNN
off
or
N
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
memory
or
N
NNNNNNNNNNNNN
disk
11-55
Summary of Contents for 54750A
Page 1: ...User s Guide HP 83480A Analyzer HP 54750A Oscilloscope ...
Page 6: ...NOTE Clean the cabinet using a damp cloth only vi ...
Page 7: ...X Ray Radiation Notice vii ...
Page 8: ...Declaration of Conformity viii ...
Page 17: ...Figure0 1 Exampleof astatic safeworkstation xvii ...
Page 28: ......
Page 43: ...1 The Instrument at a Glance ...
Page 57: ...The Rear Panel Figure1 3 Theinstrument rearpanel 1 15 ...
Page 60: ...TheInstrument ataGlance ...
Page 61: ...2 General Purpose Keys ...
Page 69: ...3 Speci cations and Characteristics ...
Page 76: ...Speci cationsand Characteristics ...
Page 77: ...4 Calibration Overview ...
Page 84: ...CalibrationOverview ...
Page 85: ...5 Eye Mask and Eyeline Mode Measurement Tutorials ...
Page 136: ...Eye Mask andEyelineModeMeasurement Tutorials ...
Page 137: ...6 The Digital Communications Analysis Menus ...
Page 173: ...The Digital Communications Analysis Menus MeasureEyeMenu Figure6 7 Crossing measurement 6 37 ...
Page 178: ...The Digital Communications Analysis Menus MeasureEye Menu Figure6 11 MeasuringQ factor 6 42 ...
Page 191: ...7 Waveform Measurements ...
Page 211: ...8 Making Automatic Measurements ...
Page 233: ...9 Increasing Measurement Accuracy and Time Interval Measurement ...
Page 252: ...IncreasingMeasurement Accuracy andTime Interval Measurement ...
Page 253: ...10 General Purpose Oscilloscope Menus ...
Page 317: ...11 The General Function Menus ...
Page 345: ...The General Function Menus DisplayMenu Figure11 3 Connecteddots 11 29 ...
Page 415: ...12 Messages ...
Page 421: ...13 How the Instrument Works ...
Page 453: ...Index ...