P7001

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The Tektronix P7001 is a digitizer, processor, and memory for the 7704A oscilloscope. The P7001 can also be connected to an external computer which then is able to process the digitized signals. The complete system was called "Digital Processing Oscilloscope" or "DPO" for short and was presented to the public on 26 March 1973 at the IEEE Intercon in New York City.

The design of the P7001 assumes it will be part of a 7704A system, and that the 7704A will be displaying a steady trace. The vertical and horizonal plug-ins control the beam as they would in any 7000-series scope.

The P7001 periodically samples the horizontal and vertical signals simultaneously as they pass from the plug-ins to the vertical and horizontal amplifiers. This allows it to fill its memory with data points represented as coordinate pairs, (x1,y1), (x2,y2), (x3,y3), etc. It is not necessary that x2 be greater than x1, i.e. the samples can be taken out-of-order with respect to their equivalent time in the waveform.

Key Specifications

Resolution 10 bit (V), 9 bit (H)
Memory four waveforms, 512 samples each (4K × 10 bit core, or multiple 1k × 10 bit or 2k × 10 bit RAM boards)
Sampling rate 150 kHz ±30 kHz
External interface 16 bit parallel, proprietary "CP bus" (dual 37-pin Sub-D connectors) interfacing with Tektronix CP-1100 or CP-4100 series controllers

Links

Catalog / Specs

Advertising

Internals

The signal coming from the acquisition unit enters a fast four-diode sample and hold circuit where it is sampled at 150 ksamples/sec. Each sample is digitized using a successive-approximation scheme. The analog to digital converter is made of several chips: a digital to analog converter, a comparator, and control logic.

The P7001 has its own power supply built into it, independent of the power supply in the acquisition unit of the 7704A. It has a backplane with an asynchronous bus and several cards that plug into that bus: sampler, analog to digital converter, memory, external digital interface, and display electronics. The P7001 was available with semiconductor memory or with magnetic core memory. Both types of memory were available through the whole production time of the P7001. In the first years the core memory module was cheaper and the default module. In later years the semiconductor memory module got cheaper and then this module was the default one. But the core memory module has one big adavantage: The memory content was preserved during a shutdown of the unit. This may have been the reason the core memory option remained available in the later years of P7001 production.

The bus is used for low speed signals. High speed signals are sent through coaxial cables that connect to the cards using Peltola connectors.

The Acquisition Unit of the 7704A, the P7001 Processor, and the Display Unit of the 7704A are connected by the Acquisition-Processor-Display (APD) Interface shown below.

Memory

Several types of memory configurations were available: 1k, 2k, 3k or 4k semiconductor memory and also 4k non-volatile core memory. All configurations were available through the whole lifecycle of the P7001. The memory serves to store the acquired waveforms and their associated scale factors. It also stores the computer output for display. Depending on the configuration the following storing capabilites are available:

Configuration Waveforms Readout
Scale factors
Messages
1k with readout 1 1 3
1k no readout(*) 2 0 0
2k with readout 2 2 4
2k no readout(*) 4 0 0
3k 4 1 4
4k 4 4 12

* Removing the Readout-Interface card doubles the space for storing waveforms but eliminates the capability of displaying informations.

Readout Interface

There are two readout devices in the DPO. One is the readout board in the acquisition unit of the 7704A and the other is the readout interface card in the P7001. In the modes "PLUG-INS" or "STORE" all readout information displayed on the CRT come directly from the plugins. In "STORE" mode the readout interface digitizes these information, converts them to ASCII-data and stores it in memory. In the modes "BOTH" or "MEMORY" the readout interface converts the ASCII data back to readout information and displays them on the CRT.

External Interfaces

Part Number Description
021-0113-00 DPO to Data General Nova
021-0116-00 DPO to APD
021-0117-00 DPO to CP1100 (CP Bus)
021-0127-00 DPO to TEK31 calculator
021-0146-00 DPO to CAMAC
021-0175-00 DPO to 4010 Family
021-0206-00 DPO to GPIB

Pictures

Internal

Keyboard overlay cards

External Interfaces (optional)

Sample and Hold Card

Core Memory (optional)

Semiconductor memory (optional)

ADC and Display

Hardware signal Averager (HSA)

Schematics

Cofigurations

Workflow with connected Controller

X/Y Mode for external Controller

Design Team
Notable Members of the Design Team were: Hiro Moriyasu, Bruce Hamilton, Luis Navarro and Jack Gilmore.


Firmware (uploaded BIN files)