Speci
fi
cations
Table 2: Skew control (analog to analog skew)
Characteristic
Description
Range
0 ps to 240000 ps (at 2.5 GS/s)
(Shift clock using delay line.)
Resolution
10 ps
Accuracy, typical
±(10% of effective s 20 ps) at 2.5 GS/s
Internal
< 200 ps from 1.25 GSa/s to 2.5 GSa/s
< 1 ns below 1.25 GSa/s
Table 3: Skew control (analog to digital skew)
Characteristic
Description
Range
0 ps to 101790 ps (at 2.5 GS/s)
Resolution
78 ps
Accuracy, typical
±(10% of effective s 140 ps)
Internal
< 1.4 ns from 1.25 GSa/s to 2.5 GSa/s
< 2 ns from 100 MSa/s to 1.25 GSa/s
< 4.5 ns below 100 MSa/s
Table 4: Skew control (analog to trigger/marker skew)
Characteristic
Description
Range
0 ps to 101790 ps (at 2.5 GS/s)
Resolution
78 ps
Accuracy, typical
±(10% of effective s 140 ps)
Internal
< 1.4 ns from 1.25 GSa/s to 2.5 GSa/s
< 2 ns from 100 MSa/s to 1.25 GSa/s
< 4.5 ns below 100 MSa/s
Table 5: Operating mode for Basic, nominal
Characteristic
Description
Basic mode
Uses Direct Digital Synthesis (DDS) techniques. It is the prevailing signal generator
architecture in the industry today. This mode offers fewer waveform variations than Advanced
mode, but with excellent stability and fast response to frequency change. It can switch almost
instantly between two frequencies/waveforms. Basic mode also offers a way to modulate
the signal from internal or external sources, which is essential for some types of standards
compliance testing. In this mode, the sampling clock is
fi
xed.
Run mode
Continuous, Modulation, Sweep, and Burst
Burst count
1 to 1,000,000 cycles or in
fi
nite
Internal trigger delay
0 to 100 s
Resolution: 1 ps, 15 digits
6
AWG4162 Speci
fi
cations and Performance Veri
fi
cation