Musical Instrument User Manual
FUNCTION REFERENCE 5 - 17
CHANNEL/TRACE SELECTION
Description:
In this family of instruments, the distinction is made between ‘channel’ and ‘trace’. 
A channel is referred to as an input channel, complete with AMPL and POS 
settings. A trace represents a waveform which has been stored in one of the 
register memories. Once such a waveform is recalled from memory, it is displayed 
on the screen as a trace.
Each channel can be turned ON and OFF by the ON key located near the channel 
keys on the front panel. In the digital mode, this key switches the acquisition and 
the display on/off.
In the 
digital
 mode, a waveform which has been previously stored in a register, can 
be recalled and displayed via the RECALL menu. One of the registers (M0) is the 
acquisition register, where the newly acquired data from the input channels is stored.
The RECALL function only switches on and off the display of the trace and does 
not influence the acquisition. It allows the running acquisition to be hidden to give 
a better view of the processed results calculated from an acquisition running in 
the ‘background’.
In addition to the acquisition register (M0), the scope provides eight different 
register memory locations (50 for the extended memory version). Each memory 
location can hold a maximum of one of the following:
4 (3) waveforms of 512 samples.
4 (3) waveforms of 2K samples.
2 (2) waveforms of 4K samples.
1 (1) waveform of 8K samples.
The number of stored waveforms depends on 
the selected acquisition length and the number 
of channels that were active at the moment of 
the acquisition.
To switch single traces on and off instead of a 
total register, the bottom key in the RECALL 
menu can be used to select TRACE instead of 
REGISTER. The RECALL menu is then trace 
oriented instead of register oriented.
Example : m1 changes in m1.1 and m1.2, 
representing the labels for the ch1 
trace in m1 and the ch2 trace in m1, 
respectively. Label m1.e is for the 
External Trigger input signal in m1.










