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One of the more obscure controls on an oscilloscope is the Trigger Holdoff control. A dedicated control on most high end analog oscilloscopes, and a main menu option in modern digital scopes, yet often poorly understood. What does it do and how does it work?
(the background noise is crickets!)
Пікірлер: 128
You recorded this over 12 years ago and you helped me today (6/27/2023) to understand this capability. I was confused by the trigger offset setting but I understand it now. With your explanation and demonstration, it now makes perfect sense. I also gained experience with my waveform generator to properly set it to generate the burst pulses for the scope. THANK YOU!
I've been using scopes - analog and digital, for years and never understood how to use Holdoff. I'm doing a circuit design analysis right now and I think Holdoff will remove the analog signal confusion I am seeing. THANK YOU!
A seasoned electronics tech (+15 years) I work with spend two days replacing IC's and parts to fix an "intermittent problem". It was just the holdoff a previous tech set. :) I learned what it does just by using scopes, especially when I needed to capture longer digital pulses. I'm one of those who refuse to use the auto-scale, unlike my classmates. I love your blog!
I finally understood it. It's such a simple concept, thanks man. You made it really simple!
@neutron7 If one person learned something then I'm happy!
Hi, I just wanted to say thanks for posting these informative videos. I first watched your videos when I bought a multimeter based on your multimeter comparison video 3 years ago and now I am 1 year away from my BA in EE. Thanks for helping me understand along the way!
Thank you very much for you clear, motivated, kind and didactic explanation , it helped me very much for my Electrical Mesurement's exam. Greetings from Argentina!
Excellent explanation! I just posted a question to the eevblog forums and they pointed me here - your example is almost EXACTLY what I'm trying to achieve. Keep up the great work!
Arghhh! It's exactly the kind of feature I needed for my project. Been searching for something like that in the bloody trigger menu for months without finding anything ( and it's in the horizontal menu of my scope actually). Thanks a lot.
Thanks Dave...You are the only one that takes the time to explain the value of owning an older Analog scope, where you had to wrap your brain around!
G'day "multimeter Jones". I've watched dozens of your videos - enjoyed them and learned a lot. Thank you!
Never knew this. What an invaluable source of info EEVblog is. I will never forget this piece of info now.
Thank you for this great tutorial, Dave! I did not know what and what for this function was in my oscilloscope but now I know.
Lovely. Thanks, Dave! An interesting feature, wonderfully explained. :)
many thanks for the simple and practical hands-on tutorial !!
Fantastic! I finally discovered my holdoff control when I was started playing with AM signals.
hi David L. Jones, i really like the way u explain every thing so crisp clear, u rock and i will go through all your videos
Loved this episode! Just got my Rigol scope last week, never really used a scope before, so educational videos like this go a long way. I had this exact problem scoping a signal already, so it was great to know how to deal with it, other than hitting the stop button. :)
Another great, useful video! Thank you for spending your time and effort to educate.
13 years old. Still relevant. Thanks!
Not only have a I never used that knob, but I never even noticed it was there! Very cool!
Love hearing crickets while the snow's falling here.
Great class, Dave! Thank you
Dave, ABSOLUTELY| FANTASTIC! The most useful thing I've learnt this month! MAGIC!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Rigol is on its way and already saving for that Agilent, that feels and looks incredible! VERY valuable lesson here, been troubleshooting my I2S interface the other day with my analogue 30MHz Hameg scope and it "does" the job, but this is 10000 times better mate, thanks for this keeeeeep them comingggggggggggg!
Oh wow, I learned about a function on an oscilloscope I never knew existed. Thank you Dave!☺️👍
Thank you Dave! Great video! I really didn't understand the hold off on my Rigol until this video.
Awesome video. Thank you ... I learned something new today.
Thank you EEVblog. I just got a scope and I was wondering how to see data packets. Now I understand how to use 'trigger holdoff'.
Excellent! Previously I have always used to use the start/stop or single sweep method. Thanks.
This really helps observing periodical I2C transmission!
Very good explanation. 👍👍👍
Excellent video ! Thanks for taking the time to make it. On another note, an oscilloscope without triggering of some sort is extremely limited in what it can do. Thanks again.
Thanks Dave - You tought me something new
I learnt something new today! Cheers Dave.
Used it to catch a responses from an I2C chip and was able to verify protocol between Master and Slave. Works great!
Thank you Dave!
Thanks! Very helpful.
Great video. thank you!
Dave at his best. Nice vid.
March 2011 :( Why no more? I would love a whole beginners series! :) Love this guy, so much passion and a breath and depth of knowledge. Also as a American every saying he uses is the first I have ever heard it, just love it! :) Current favorite is "young players". N.B.-I know "young players" is not necessarily an Australian phrase, it just happens to be my favorite one at the moment.
@PeterWalkerHP16c
8 жыл бұрын
+victormgv Check out Fundamental Friday playlist. Tutorial is another search term. You need to fossick around a bit to get all the lecture stuff. It's a trap for young players. :-)
Thanks! I learned something today!
Interesting and informative. Great video!
Hi and thanks I finely find a verry good tutorial site ! It's hard to find sommething usefull on KZread !
wow great video, i learned a lot from this video it explains a lot when i see multiple waves on the scope and how i can fix it! i've been taking electronics since gr9 of high school, and no one have ever taught what that knob does! definitely something that should be taught tho Thanks!
Useful for looking at RC ppm signals.
Thanks Dave. Good stuff .
@Wizard4592 Yeah, sorry about that, really loud crickets. Didn't want to delay the shoot until they stopped chirping!
Thanks. Much better explanation than my Tek manual!
good vid Dave, u explained it well, more pls :D
awesome I learnt something new!
Great video, always great to learn new stuff! Holdoff trigger was always a bit in the dark side for me:) BTW, that Agilent looks better and better every time I see it. Too bad that grey dealer Niatel in my country asks 4x regular US price.... Regarding the crickets, it instantly reminded me of warm summer nights, keep them on for every video:)))
Yep, always something new to learn or review. Let’s keep it going ......
Awesome , thank you .
@ttk1opc Actual crickets!
Wow. Ive seen that jumbled mess fairly recently. Good video.
@EEVblog It's usually a big button that can be bumped easily too. Maybe it should be labeled "Nuke Settings"
Thanks, good video. Learned a lot
Love you man
nice video i learn something i did not now.
That was a great example! I only use a small subset of the controls on equipment like scopes. One more knob I know how to usefully twiddle! :)
awesome, you taught me something, I have the same rigol thanks to you :)
Review of test gear + tutorials on using them. Three thumbs up!
@truhlikfredy What example should I have used then?
excellent!
@jeriellsworth The Agilent one is nicely and safely recessed. It can even be disabled in software to stop students cheating.
Sweet!! I learned something.
now i understand triggering well ,, and i have the same rigol thanks to you :D
Thank you.
Thanks a lot
Make one about External Trigger!
I liked this video. Another cool thing is external trigger.
Thank you
Thanks 👍 From Nick Ayivor from London England UK 🇬🇧
Love it
I noticed that one of your playlist says Electronics Beginners guides although i only see one video in it and its pretty old considering the date.
I like the auto button . But i have been forcing myself to set up the scope manually. unless i have to use both hands to hold the probe. in that instance I really love the auto button. Dave can you do a hole series on Scope use¿ and maybe put them all in a play list¿ yea i noticed the crickets.
I find this feature usefull if a waveform has a lot of harmonics and I need to see it more clearly, it's allmost like I can ''tune in'' to the waveform.
Question! Assume a 2 kHz simple sine signal and the CRO is set to 0.1 ms (or 100 μs) /Div, triggering on upwards slope at 0 V, so one complete cycle fits exactly on HALF the screen. Will the scope trigger at every valid transition? If yes, it should only show the signal on the left half of the screen 🤔
I learned all this info in on O-scope usage in C school in the US NAVY i was a IC 2 e-5 electronic tech on board submarines I used the scope to repair all the electronics on board . The bad part about the subs is you must use a isolation transformer or a bad way a cheater cord with no ground . I leaned that the hard way first time I used one in a Gyro switch blew the hell out of the first scope had to replace it during offcrew man those were the days.
I'd love to see something on eye diagrams. Great video.
so it's almost like digital debouncing of the trigger?
@Nermash x4 the US price really sucks :-( Can you import?
Wow, this could of really helped me in my project. I usually just stopped the trace to get a waveform :p
@Gameboygenius Nice!
"I think you choose very bad example to showing this feature" Give us the link to your uploads so that everyone will learn more effectively from your superior videos .
Actually, I'll proudly say that I learnt how to use holdoff all by myself. I was probing a digital signal and got that typical jumble all over the screen and I thought "wouldn't it be good if there was a function that delayed the triggering" and then I loked at the panel. :)
So, basically each trigger is a horizontal scan line! The horizontal retrace is non-drawing time, which can be used to do computation. All the triggering (pre and post) are good for notifications via interrupts. This is just like software.
Hi Dave, very nice basic introduction to holdoff time. Yet, I have one question: If there's only 1 occurance of "digital pulses sequence", instead of repetitive sequences with a "modulation period" equaling the "holdoff time", how shall I capture the single sequence? Thank you!
@EEVblog Too many of them are by the run/stop button. WTF?
lol, why on earth i never use this knob. very informative, thanks
@truhlikfredy Holdoff time still matters on a signal like that. If you use time/div to enlarge the signal, for instance, you may get the end of the packet outside the first sweep, triggering a second sweep. Hold off can remove that second sweep properly, and then you can use a trigger delay to closely inspect any part of the signal you like. Of course, techniques like this matter more when you don't have a deep sample buffer.. and my scope is fully analog.
hey dave I am a novice electronics junkie and new subscriber. I wonder if you would make a video discussing analog sinthisizers from the late 70s up to today and talk about how they work. I am a big fan of electronic music that is sometimes made with modular sinth components and think it would make a facinating episode. perhaps some gear such as moog sinths and such??
I am a beginner. Could you do a video on what a beginner can do with a scope that would justify buying one. Maybe using Remote control transmitter or an old radio or something to show how or what you can do to trouble shoot small electronics with a scope. Maybe using a 100mhz or less (cheap to buy used). Thanks and I enjoy your videos even though some of it I don't understand as of yet.
MAGIC
What is that cricket like sound in the background?
what is blind time of analog scope....
I find it difficult to get my triggering to hold on my scope :o9
I just taught a lab where students decoded IR remote control packets, would have been nice to have this tutorial to give the students - that looks like an IR packet in your example at 13:00.
is this really a necessary feature for a digital oscilloscope if you just can press hold? on an analog one i can see the use allthough i cannot imagine what you are going to do with the result. and it only seems to be usefull anyway if the sent package is always the same (isn that rather rare?)
@TheHuesSciTech
9 жыл бұрын
If the packets have the same length, but part of the data inside is changing, this feature allows you to see that change, live. That's extremely useful. Granted, you can achieve the same thing with pulse > X triggering, but still. A stopped waveform is never as good as a well-triggered, live waveform -- how else will you see glitches, jitter and genuine data changes?
Run your trigger in Single mode, instead of Normal or Auto. This should "capture" that pulse and let you move around it. (it only works with storage oscilloscope though)