Symbols2
Specifications3
Front Panel Summary5
Abridged Command List7
Status Byte Definition8
Configuration Switches8
Guide to Operation
Front Panel9
Signal Inputs9
Signal Fi lters9
Sensitivity9
Dynamic Reserve10
Status Indicators10
Display Select10
Channel 1 Display10
R Output11
Output Channel 111
Rel Channel 111
Offset Channel 111
Expand Channel 112
X (RCOSØ) Output12
Channel 2 Display12
Ø Output12
Output Channel 213
Rel Channel 213
Auto Phase13
Offset Channel 213
Expand Channel 214
Y (RSINØ) Output14
Reference Input14
Trigger Level14
Reference Mode15
Reference Display15
Phase Controls15
Time Constants15
Noise Measurements15
Power Switch16
Local/Remote Operation16
Default Settings16
Rear Panel17
AC Power 17
GPIB (IEEE-488) Connector17
RS232 Connector17
Signal Monitor Output17
Pre-Amp Connector17
A/D Inputs and D/A Outputs17
Ratio Feature17
Internal Oscillator17
Guide to Programming
Communications19
Command Syntax19
Status LED's19
RS232 Echo Feature20
Try-out with an ASCII Terminal20
Command List21
Status Byte24
Errors24
Reset Command25
Trouble-Shooting Interf ac e Probl ems25
Common Hardware Problems25
Common Software Problems25
RS232 Interface
Introduction to the RS23226
Data Communications Equipment26
Wait Command26
Termination Sequence26
GPIB (IEEE-488) Interface
Introduction to the GPIB26
GPIB Capabilities26
Response to Special GPIB comman ds26
Serial Polls and SRQ's27
Echo Mode using the RS23227
Using Both the RS232 & GPIB27
Lock-in Technique
Introduction to Lock-in Amplifier s28
Measurement Example28
Understanding the Specifications 29
Shielding and Ground Loops29
Dynamic Reserve30
Current Inputs30
Bandpass Filter30
Notch Filters31
Frequency Range31
Output Time Constants31
Noise Measurements31
Ratio Capability31
Computer Interfaces31
Internal Oscillator31
SR530 Block Diagram
Block Diagram32
Signal Channel33
Reference Channel33
Phase-Sensitive Detector33
DC Amplifier and System Gain33
Microprocessor System33
i
Circuit Description
Introduction34
Signal Amplifier34
Current Amplifier34
Notch Filters34
Bandpass Filter34
Reference Oscillator35
PSD, LP Filters and DC Amplifier35
Analog Output36
A/D's36
D/A's36
Expand 36
Front Panel36
Microprocessor Control36
RS232 Interface37
GPIB Interface37
Power Supplies37
Internal Oscillator37
Calibration and Repair
Introduction38
Multiplier Adjustments38
Amplifier and Filter Adjustments38
CMRR Adjustment38
Line Notch Filter Adjustment39
2xLine Notch Filter Adjustment39
Repairing Damaged Front-End39
IBM PC, Microsoft Basic, via GPIB51
HP-85, HP Basic, via HPIB53
Documentation
Parts List, Oscillator Board55
Parts List, Main Board56
Parts List, Front Panel Board70
Parts List, Quad Board73
Parts List, Miscellaneous77
Schematic Diagrams79
Simplest Case Using the RS23243
Using Control Lines43
Baud Rates43
Stop Bits44
Parity44
Voltage Levels44
'Eavesdropping'44
Appendix C: GPIB
Introduction to the GPIB45
Bus Description45
Appendix D: Program Examples
Program Description46
IBM PC, Microsoft Basic, via RS23246
IBM PC, Microsoft Fortran, via RS23247
IBM PC, Microsoft C, via RS23249
ii
Safety and Preparation for Use
***CAUTION***: This instrument may be damaged if operated with the LINE VOLTAGE SELECTOR set for
the wrong applied ac input-source voltage or if the wrong fuse is installed.
LINE VOLTAGE SELECTION
The SR530 operates from a 100V, 120V, 220V, or
240V nominal ac power source having a line
frequency of 50 or 60 Hz. Before connecting the
power cord to a power source, verify that the LINE
VOLTAGE SELECTOR card, located in the rear
panel fuse holder, is set so that the correct ac input
voltage value is visible.
Conversion to other ac input voltages requires a
change in the fuse holder voltage card position and
fuse value. Disconnect the power cord, open the
fuse holder cover door and rotate the fuse-pull lever
to remove the fuse. Remove the small printed circuit
board and select the operating voltage by orienting
the printed circuit board to position the desired
voltage to be visible when pushed firmly into its slot.
Rotate the fuse-pull lever back into its normal
position and insert the correct fuse into the fuse
holder.
LINE FUSE
Verify that the correct line fuse is installed before
connecting the line cord. For 100V and 120V, use a
½ Amp fuse and for 220V and 240V, use a 1/4 Amp
fuse.
FURNISHED ACCESSORIES
- Power Cord
- Operating Manual
ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS
OPERATING
Temperature: +10° C to +40° C
(Specifications apply over +18° C to +28° C)
Relative Humidity: < 90% Non-condensing
NON-OPERATING
Temperature: -25° C to 65° C
Humidity: < 95% Non-condensig
OPERATE WITH COVERS IN PLACE
To avoid personal injury, do not remove the
product covers or panels. Do not operate the
product without all covers and panels in place.
WARNING REGARDING USE WITH
PHOTOMULTIPLIERS
LINE CORD
This instrument has a detachable, three-wire power
cord with a three-contact plug for connection to both
the power source and protective ground. The
protective ground contact connects to the accessible
metal parts of the instrument. To prevent electrical
shock, always use a power source outlet that has a
properly grounded protectiv e-gr ou nd con tac t.
It is relatively easy to damage the signal inputs if
a photomultiplier is used improperly with the
lock-in amplifier. When left completely
unterminated, a PMT will charge a cable to a
few hundred volts in a very short time. If this
cable is connected to the lockin, the stored
charge may damage the front-end transistors.
To avoid this problem, provide a leakage path of
about 100 KΩ to ground inside the base of the
PMT to prevent charge accumulation.
1
2
SR530 Specification Summary
General
Power100, 120, 220, 240 VAC (50/60 Hz); 35 Watts Max
Mechanical17" x 17" x 5.25" (Rack Mount Included) 16 lbs.
WarrantyTwo years parts and labor.
Signal Channel
InputsVoltage:Single-ended or True Differential
Current:10
ImpedanceVoltage:100 MΩ + 25 pF, ac coupled
Current:1 kΩ to virtual ground
Full Scale SensitivityVoltage:100 nV (10 nV on expand) to 500 mV
Current:100 fA to 0.5 µA
Maximum InputsVoltage:100 VDC, 10 VAC damage threshold
Current:10 mA damage threshold
NoiseVoltage:7 nV/√Hz at 1 kHz
Current:0.13 pA/√ Hz at 1 kHz
Common ModeRange:1 Volt peak; Rejection: 100 dB dc to 1KHz
Gain Accuracy1% (2 Hz to 100KHz)
Gain Stability200 ppm/°C
Signal Filters60 Hz notch, -50 dB (Q=10, adjustable from 45 to 65 Hz)
120 Hz notch, -50 dB (Q=10, adjustable from 100 to 130 Hz))
Tracking bandpass set to within 1% of ref freq (Q=5)
Dynamic Reserve20 dBLOW(1 µV to 500 mV sensitivity)
40 dBNORM (100 nV to 50 mV sensitivity)
60 dBHIGH(100 nV to 5 mV sensitivity)
Bandpass filter adds 20 dB to dynamic reserve
Line Notch filters increase dynamic reserve to 100 dB
6
Volts/Amp
2 VAC peak-to-peak saturation
1 µA ac peak-to-peak saturation
Above 1KHz the CMRR degrades by 6 dB/Octave
Reference Channel
Frequency0.5 Hz to 100 kHz
Input Impedance1 MΩ, ac coupled
TriggerSINE:100 mV minimum, 1Vrms nominal
PULSE:±1 Volt, 1 µsec minimum width
ModeFundamental (f) or 2nd Harmonic (2f)
3
Acquisition Time25 Sec at 1 Hz
6 Sec at 10 Hz
2 Sec at 10 kHz
Slew Rate 1 decade per 10 S at 1 kHz
Phase Control90° shifts
Fine shifts in 0.025° steps
Phase Noise0.01° rms at 1 kHz, 100 msec, 12 dB TC
Phase Drift0.1°/°C
Phase ErrorLess than 1° above 10Hz
Orthogonality90° ± 1°
Demodulator
Stability5 ppm/°C on LOW dy nam ic res erv e
50 ppm/°C on NORM dynamic reserve
500 ppm/°C on HIGH dynamic reserve
Time ConstantsPre:1msec to 100 sec (6 dB/Octave)
Post:1sec, 0.1 sec, none (6 dB/Octave) or none
OffsetUp to 1X full scale (10X on expand)
Both channels may be offset
Harmonic Rej-55 dB (bandpass filter in)
Outputs & Interfaces
Channel 1 Outputs X (RcosØ), X Offset, R (magnitude), R Offset, X Noise, X5 (external D/A)
Channel 2 OutputsY (RsinØ), Y Offset, Ø (phase shift of signal), Y Noise, X6 (external D/A)
Output Meters2% Precision mirrored analo g meter
Output LCD'sFour digit auto-ranging LCD display shows same values as the analog meters
Output BNC's±10 V output corresponds to full scale input, <1Ω output impedance
X OutputX (RcosØ), ±10 V full scale, < 1Ω output impedance
Y OutputY (RsinØ), ±10 V full scale, < 1Ω output imp eda nce
Reference LCDFour digit LCD display for reference phase shift or frequency
RS232 Interface controls all functions. Baud rates from 300 to 19.2 K
GPIBInterface controls all functions. ( IEEE-488 Std )
A/D4 BNC inputs with 13 bit resolution (±10.24 V)
D/A2 BNC outputs with 13 bit resolution (±10.24 V)
RatioRatio output equals 10X Channel 1 output divided by the Denominator input.
Internal OscillatorRange:1 Hz to 100 kHz, 1% accuracy
Signal InputsSingle Ended (A), True Differential (A-B), or Current (I)
Signal FiltersBandpass:Q-of-5 Auto-tracking filter (In or Out)
Line Notch:Q-of-10 Notch Filter at line frequency (In or Out)
2XLine Notch: Q-of-10 Notch Filter at twice line frequency (In or Out)
SensitivityFull scale sensitivity from 100 nV to 500 mV RMS for voltage inputs
or from 100 fA to 500 nA RMS for current inputs.
Dynamic ReserveSelect Dynamic Reserve
LOW20 dB5 ppm 1 µV to 500 mV
NORM40 dB50 ppm100 nV to 50 mV
HIGH60 dB500 ppm100 nV to 5 mV
Status IndicatorsOVLD Signal Overload
UNLK PLL is not locked to the reference input
ERRIllegal or Unrecognized command
ACTRS232 or GPIB interface Activity
REMRemote mode: front panel has been locked-out
Display SelectChannel 1Channel 2
X (RcosØ)Y (RsinØ)
X OffsetY Offset
R (Magnitude) Ø (Phase)
R OffsetØ (no offset)
X NoiseY Noise
X5 (D/A)X6 (D/A)
Analog MetersDisplays Channel 1 and 2 Outputs as a fraction of full scale
Output LCD'sDisplays the Channel 1 and 2 Outputs in absolute units
Output BNC'sChannel 1 and 2 Outputs follow Analog Meters, ± 10 V for ± full scale
ExpandMultiplies the Channel 1 or 2 Analog Meter and Output voltage by a factor X1 or X10.
Stability Sensitivity Ranges
RELSet the Channel 1 or 2 Offset to null the output: subsequent readings are relative
readings. REL with phase display performs auto-phasing. REL with X5, X6 display
zeroes the D/A outputs.
OffsetEnables or Disables Offset, and allows any offset (up to full scale) to be entered. X, Y,
and R may be offset and X5, X6 may be adjusted. Phase is offset using the reference
phase shift.
X BNCX (RcosØ) output, ± 10V full scale
Y BNCY (RsinØ) output, ± 10V full scale
Reference Input1 MΩ Input, 0.5 Hz to 100 KHz, 100 mV minimum
Reference TriggerTrigger on rising edge, zero crossing, or falling edge
f/2f ModePLL can lock to either X1 or X2 of the reference input frequency
5
Phase ControlsAdjust phase in smoothly accelerating 0.025° steps, or by
90° steps. Press both 90° buttons to zero the phase.
Reference LCDDisplay reference phase setting or reference frequency
Time ConstantsPre-filter has time constants from 1 mS to 100 S (6 dB/Octave)
Post-filter has time constants of 0, 0.1 or 1.0 S (6 dB/Octave)
ENBWEquivalent Noise Bandwidth. Specifies the bandwidth when making
Noise measurements. (1Hz or 10 Hz ENBW)
Power SwitchInstrument settings from the last use are recalled on power-up
6
Abridged Command List
AXAuto offset X
AYAuto offset Y
ARAuto offset R
APAuto phase
BReturn Bandpass Filter Sta tus
B0Take out the Bandpass Filter
B1Put in the Bandpass Filter
CReturn the Reference LCD Status
C0Display the Reference Frequency
C1Displ ay the Refere nce Phas e Sh ift
DReturn Dynamic Reserve Setting
D0Set DR to LOW range
D1Set DR to NORM range
D2Set DR to HIGH range
EnReturn Channel n (1 or 2) Expand
Status
En,0Turn Channel n Expand off
En,1Turn Channel n Expand on
FReturn the Reference Frequency
GReturn the Sensitivity Setting
OXReturn X Offset Status
OX 0Turn off X Offset
OX 1,vTurn on X Offset, v = offset
OYReturn Y Offset Status
OY 0Turn off Y Offset
OY 1,vTurn on Y Offset, v = offset
ORReturn R Offset Status
OR 0Turn off R Offset
OR 1,vTurn on R Offset, v = offset
PReturn the Phase Setting
PvSet the Phase to v. Abs(v) <999 deg
Q1Return the Channel 1 output
Q2Return the Channel 2 output
QXReturn the X Output
QYReturn the Y Output
RReturn the trigger mode
R0Set the trigger for rising edge
R1Set the trigger for + zero crossing
R2Set the trigger for falling edge
SReturn the display status
S0Display X and Y
S1Display X and Y Offsets
S2Display R and Ø
S3Display R Offset and Ø
S4Display X and Y noise
S5Display X5 and X6 (ext D/A)
T1Return pre-fi lter sett in g
T1,1Set the pre-filter TC to 1 mS
...
T1,11Set the pre-filter TC to 100 S
T2Return the post-filter setting
T2,0Remove post filter
T2,1Set the post filter TC to 0.1 S
T2,2Set the post filter TC to 1.0 S
VReturn the value of the SRQ mask
VnSet the SRQ Mask to the value n
(See the Status Byte definition)
WReturn the RS232 wait interval
WnSet RS232 wait interval to nX4mS
XnReturn the voltage at the rear panel
analog port n. (n from 1 to 6)
X5,vSet analog port 5 to voltage v
X6,vSet analog port 6 to voltage v
YReturn the Status Byte value
YnTest bit n of the Status Byte
ZReset to default settings and cancel
all pending commands.
7
Status Byte Definition
Bit Meaning
0 Magnitude too small to calculate
phase
1 Command Parameter is out-of-range
2 No detectable reference input
3 PLL is not locked to the reference
4 Signal Overload
5 Auto-offset failed: signal too large
6 SRQ generated
7 Unrecognized or illegal command
Configuration Switches
There are two banks of 8 switches, SW1 and
SW2, located on the rear panel. SW1 sets the
GPIB address and SW2 sets the RS232
parameters. The configuration switches are read
continuously and any changes will be effective
immediately.
SW1:GPIB Mode Switches
Bit Example Function
1 } up GPIB Address Switches
2 } up Address 0 to 30 allowed
3 } up 'up' for bit = 1
4 } down 'down' for bit = 0
5 } up (Most Significant Bit)
6 down 'down' to echo on RS232
(normally 'up')
7 up Not Used
8 up Not Used
If the GPIB mode switches are set as shown in the
example column above, then the lockin will be
addressed as GPIB device #23, and all GPIB
commands and data will be echoed over the
RS232 for de-bugging purposes.
SW2:RS232 Mode Switches
Bit 1 Bit 2 Bit 3 Baud Rate
up up up 19200
down up up 9600
up down up 4800
down down up 2400
up up down 1200
down up down 600
up down down 300
Bit Setting Explanation
4 up Odd parity
down Even parity
5 up No parity
down Parity enabled
6 up No echo (for computer)
down Echo mode (for terminal)
7 up Two stop bits
down One stop bit
8 unused
Eight data bits are always sent, regardless of the
parity setting. The most significant bit is always
zero.
Example: Bit 1 'down' and all others 'up' for
RS232 communication at 9600 baud, no parity,
two stop bits, and no echo or prompts by the
SR530.
8
SR510 Guide to Operation
Front Panel
The front panel has been designed to be almost
self-explanatory. The effect of each keypress is
usually reflected in the change of a nearby LED
indicator or by a change in the quantity shown on
a digital display. This discussion explains each
section of the front panel, proceeding left to right.
Signal Inputs
There are three input connectors located in the
SIGNAL INPUT section of the front panel. The
rocker switch located above the B input selects
the input mode, either single-ended, A, differential,
A-B, or current, I.
The A and B inputs are voltage inputs with 100
MΩ, 25 pF input impedance. Their connector
shields are isolated from the chassis ground by
10Ω. These inputs are protected to 100V dc but
the ac input should never exceed 10V peak. The
maximum ac input before overload is 1V peak.
The I input is a current input with an input
impedance of 1 KΩ to a virtual ground. The
largest allowable dc current before overload is 1
µA. No current larger than 10 mA should ever be
applied to this input. The conversion ratio is 10
V/A, thus, the full scale current sensitivities range
from 100 fA to 500 nA with a max ac input before
overload of 1 µA peak. You should use short
cables when using the current input.
6
allowable signals at the inputs. The notch
frequencies are set at the factory to either 50 Hz
or 60 Hz. The user can adjust these frequencies.
(See the Maintenance and Repair section for
alignment details.) These filters precede the
bandpass filter in the signal amplifier.
The bandpass filter has a Q of 5 and a 6 dB roll off
in either direction. Thus, the pass band (between
70% pass points) is always equal to 1/5th of the
center frequency. The center frequency is
continually adjusted to be equal to the internal
demodulator frequency. When the reference
mode is f, the filter tracks the reference. When the
mode is 2f, the filter frequency is twice the
reference input frequency. The center frequency
tracks as fast as the reference oscillator can slew
and may be used during frequency scans. The
bandpass filter adds up to 20 dB of dynamic
reserve for noise signals outside the pass band,
and increases the harmonic rejection by at least
13dB. (2nd harmonic attenuated by 13 dB, higher
harmonics attenuated 6dB/octave more.) If not
needed to improve the dynamic reserve or the
harmonic rejection then the filter should be left
OUT.
Sensitivity
The sensitivity is displayed as a value (1-500) and
a scale (nV, µV, mV). When using the current
input, which has a gain of 106 V/A, these scales
read fA, pA, and nA. The two keys in the
SENSITIVITY section move the sensitivity up and
down. If either key is held down, the sensitivity will
continue to change in the desired direction four
times a second.
Signal Filters
There are three user selectable signal filters
available; a line frequency notch, a 2X line
frequency notch, and an auto-tracking band pas s .
Each of the filters has a pair of indicator LED's and
a function key located in the SIGNAL FILTERS
section of the front panel. Pressing a key will
toggle the status of the appropriate filter. The
status of each filter is displayed as IN, filter active,
or OUT, filter inactive.
The notch filters have a Q of 10 and a depth of at
least 50 dB. Thus, the line frequency notch is 6
Hz wide and the 2X line notch has a width of 12
Hz. Both of these filters can increase the dynamic
reserve up to 50 dB at the notch frequencies. The
achievable reserve is limited by the maximum
The full scale sensitivity can range from 100 nV to
500 mV. The sensitivity indication is not changed
by the EXPAND function. The EXPAND function
increases the output sensitivity (Volts out /volts in)
as well as the resolution of the digital output
display.
Not all dynamic reserves are available at all
sensitivities. If the sensitivity is changed to a
setting for which the dynamic reserve is not
allowed, the dynamic reserve will change to the
next setting which is allowed. Sensitivity takes
precedence over the dynamic reserve. The
sensitivity range of each dynamic reserve is
shown below.
9
Dynamic ReserveSensitivity Range
LOW1 µV through 500 mV
NORM100 nV through 50 mV
HIGH100 nV through 5 mV
Dynamic Reserve
The dynamic reserve (DR) is set using the keys in
the DYNAMIC RESERVE section. The reserve is
displayed by the three indicator LED's, HIGH,NORM, LOW. Only those dynamic reserve
settings available for the sensitivity are allowed
(see above table). For example, when the
sensitivity is 500 mV, the DR will always be LOW.
The dynamic reserve and output stability of each
setting are shown below.
the output, i.e. in the ac amplifier or output time
constant. In this case, the dynamic reserve,
sensitivity, time constant, or ENBW needs to be
adjusted.
UNLK indicates that the reference oscillator is not
phase locked to the external reference input. This
can occur if the reference amplitude is too low, the
frequency is out of range, or the trigger mode is
incorrect for the reference signal waveform.
ERR flashes when an error occurs on one of the
computer interfaces, such as an incorrect
command, invalid parameter, etc.
ACT indicates activity on the computer interfaces.
This LED blinks every time a character is received
or transmitted by the SR530.
Since a higher DR results in degraded output
stability, you should use the lowest DR setting for
which there is no overload indication. Note that
using the Bandpass Filter provides about 20dB of
additional DR and so allows you to operate with a
lower DR setting.
Output Stability
Status
There are five STATUS LED's.
OVLD indicates a signal overload. This condition
can occur when the signal is too large, the
sensitivity is too high, the dynamic reserve is too
low, the offset is on, the expand is on, the time
constant is not large enough, or the ENBW is too
large.
The OVLD LED blinks four times a second when
an output is overloaded. This occurs if an output
exceeds full scale. For example, during a
quadrature measurement where X exceeds full
scale while Y is near zero, a blinking OVLD
indicates that it is safe to take data from the Y
output since only the X output is overloaded. The
signal path to the Y output is not overloaded.
OVLD also blinks if a noise measurement is
attempted on an output which exceeds full scale.
If the OVLD LED is on continuously or flashes
randomly, then an overload has occurred before
REM indicates that the unit is in the remote state
and that the front panel controls are not operat ive.
There are two remote states. The Remote-WithLockout will not allow any inputs from the front
panel. The Remote-Without-Lockout command
allows you to return the front panel to operation by
pressing the LOCAL key.
Display Select
The keys in the DISPLAY section sele ct the
parameters to be displayed on the OUTPUTMETERS and the output of the two OUTPUT BNC
connectors. The displayed parameters are
indicated by one of the six DISPLAY LED's and
can be either the two demodulator outputs (X Y),
the demodulator output offsets (X OFST Y OFST),
the magnitude and phase (R Ø), the magnitude
offset and phase (R OFST Ø), the rms noise on X
and Y (X NOISE Y NOISE), or the D/A outputs (X5D/A X6). When displaying NOISE, the equivalent
noise bandwidth is selected in the TIMECONSTANT section. When displaying D/A, the 2
outputs are the X5 and X6 rear panel D/A outputs,
allowing the D/A outputs to be set from the front
panel. This feature can be used to set the
reference frequency when using the internal
oscillator.
Channel 1 Display
The channel 1 outputs are summarized below. X
is equal to RcosØ where Ø is the phase shift of
the signal relative to the reference oscillator of the
lock-in.
10
display CH1 X
output expand? offset? (RCOSØ)
setting
X X+X
XOFST X
R R+R
R OFST R
XNOISE X noise yes yes X+X
X5 X5 no adjust X+X
The EXPAND and OFFSET conditions for each
display are retained when the DISPLAY is
changed. Thus, when the DISPLAY is changed
from X to R, the EXPAND and OFFSET assume
the conditions set the last time the DISPLAY was
R. If the DISPLAY is changed back to X, the
EXPAND and OFFSET return to conditions set for
X.
yes yes X+X
ofst
yes yes X
ofst
yes yes X+X
ofst
yes yes X+X
ofst
ofst
ofst
ofst
ofst
ofst
ofst
(enbw)
R Output
The magnitude, R, is given by the equation:
R = {(X+X
Note that the X and Y offsets affect the value of R
while the X and Y expands do not.
The magnitude output has a resolution of 12 bits
plus sign and is updated every 3.5 mS. To
achieve maximum accuracy, the magnitude should
be as large a fraction of full scale as possible.
R is expanded after the calculation. Thus, when R
is expanded, the full scale resolution drops by a
factor of 10 to about 9 bits.
)2 + (Y+Y
ofst
ofst
)2}
1/2
+ R
ofst
The left hand analog meter always displays the
CHANNEL 1 OUTPUT voltage. Accuracy is 2% of
full scale.
The CHANNEL 1 LCD display provides a read-out
of the displayed parameter in real units. The scale
of the displayed quantity is indicated by the three
scale LED's to the left of the display. This readout auto ranges and will reflect the sensitivity
added when the EXPAND function is on. When
displaying X5, the scale LED's are off and the
units are volts.
Rel Channel 1
Every time the REL key is pressed, the displayed
parameter is offset to zero. This is done by
loading the displayed parameter's offset with
minus one times the present output. If the output
is greater than 1.024 times full scale, the REL
function will not be able to zero the output. In this
case, the OFFSET ON LED will blink and the
offset value will be set to its maximum value.
The REL function and the manual OFFSET are
both ways to enter the offset value. After using
the REL key, the offset may be adjusted using the
manual OFFSET.
When the DISPLAY is X, X OFST, or X NOISE,
the REL key sets the X OFFSET (which affects
the X (RCOSØ) output). If XNOISE is being
displayed, the REL function zeroes X and the
noise output will require a few seconds to settle
again.
When the DISPLAY is R or R OFST, the REL key
sets the R OFFSET.
Output Channel 1
The CHANNEL 1 output is available at the left
hand OUTPUT BNC connector. The output
parameter is selected by the DISPLAY setting and
can be X, X OFST, R (magnitude), R OFST, X NOISE, or X5 (external D/A). (Note that X5 is the
ratio output at power up. When displaying X5, the
ratio output is 10R/X1). All outputs are ±10V full
scale when the EXPAND is off. With the EXPAND
on, the output is multipled by 10 effectively
increasing the full scale sensitivity by 10. (X5 may
not be expanded). The output impedance is < 1Ω
and the output current is limited to 20 mA.
The REL key zeroes the X5 output when the
DISPLAY is D/A.
Offset Channel 1
The OFFSET buttons control the manual offset.
The offset is turned ON and OFF using the upper
key in the OFFSET section. When the offset is
ON, the lower two keys are used to set the amount
of offset. A single key press will advance the
offset by 0.025% of full scale. If the key is held
down, the offset advances in larger and larger
increments, the largest increment being 10% of full
scale. When the offset is turned OFF the applied
offset returns to zero but the offset value is not
lost. The next press of the upper offset key (return
11
to ON) sets the offset to the previously entered
value.
If an attempt is made to advance the offset value
beyond full scale, the ON LED will blink. An offset
up to 1.024 times the full scale sensitivity may be
entered. When the EXPAND is on, this is 10X the
full scale output.
Note that the offsets (either manual offset or those
generated by the REL function) represent a
fraction of the full scale reading, and so their
absolute value will change when the sensitivity
scale is changed. A signal which has been nulled
by an offset will not be nulled when the sensitivity
scale is changed. The analog meter and the
output BNC indicate the same value given by the
equation:
V
= 10Ae(AvVicosØ+Vos) {if the output is X}
out
in magnitude to the selected sensitivity which is in
phase with the reference oscillator will generate a
10V output. The output impedance is <1Ω and the
output current is limited to 20 mA.
The X (RCOSØ) output is affected by the X offset
but may not be expanded. The X (RCOSØ) is not
affected by the DISPLAY setting except for two
cases. When the DISPLAY is set to X OFST, the
X (RCOSØ) output is the X offset. When the
DISPLAY is set to X NOISE, the X (RCOSØ)
output has a bandwidth equal to the ENBW (1 or
10 Hz) instead of the time constant.
Channel 2 Display
The channel 2 outputs are summarized below. Y
is equal to RsinØ where Ø is the phase shift of the
signal relative to the reference oscillator of the
lock-in.
where...
Ae= 1 or 10 per the Expand
Av= 1/Sensitivity
Vi= magnitude of the signal
Ø= phase between signal & reference
Vos= offset (fraction of FS < 1.024)
When the DISPLAY is X, X OFST, or X NOISE,
the OFFSET keys adjust the X OFFSET (which
affects the X (RCOSØ) output). When the
DISPLAY is R or R OFST, the OFFSET keys
adjust the R OFFSET. When the DISPLAY is X5,
the OFFSET up and down keys set the output
voltage of D/A output X5 (also on the rear panel)
up to ±10.24 V. Adjusting X5 will cancel the
RATIO output.
Expand Channel 1
The output EXPAND is toggled by pressing the
key in the Channel 1 EXPAND section. The
expand status is indicated by the X10, expand on,
and the X1, expand off, LED's. Only the Channel
1 OUTPUT is affected, the X (RCOSØ) output is
not expanded.
display CH2Y
settingoutput
YY+Y
YOFSTY
ØPhasenonoY+Y
ØPhasenonoY+Y
YNOISE Y noiseyesyesY+Y
X6X6noadjust Y+Y
The EXPAND and OFFSET conditions for each
display are retained when the DISPLAY is
changed. Thus, when the DISPLAY is changed
from Y to Ø, the EXPAND and OFFSET turn off. If
the DISPLAY is changed back to Y the EXPAND
and OFFSET return to conditions set for Y.
expand? offset? (RSINØ)
ofst
ofst
yesyesY+Y
yesyesY
ofst
ofst
ofst
ofst
ofst
ofst
(enbw)
Ø Output
The phase, Ø, is given by the equation:
Ø = - tan-1 {(Y+Y
Note that the X and Y offsets affect the value of Ø
while the X and Y expands do not.
ofst
)/(X+X
ofst
)}
The X5 D/A output may not be expanded.
X (RCOSØ) Output
The analog output, X+X
(RCOSØ) BNC connector. An input signal equal
, is available at the X
ofst
The Phase Output voltage is 50 mV per degree
with a resolution of 2.5 mV or 1/20 of a degree.
The output range is from -180 to +180 degrees.
The phase output is updated every 3.5 mS. To
achieve maximum accuracy, the magnitude, R,
should be as large a fraction of full scale as
12
possible. If R is less than 0.5% of full scale, the
phase output defaults to zero degrees.
The Phase Output may not be expanded and the
OFFSET keys do not offset the Phase Output.
However, the Phase Output can be offset using
the Reference Phase shift.
The Reference Phase shift, which may be
adjusted via the phase controls in the reference
section, rotates the lock-in's internal coordinate
axes relative to the reference input. The Phase
Output is the phase difference between the signal
and the lock-in's coordinate system. For example,
if a signal exactly in phase with the reference input
is being measured and the Reference Phase shift
is zero, the Phase Output will be zero also. This is
because the lock-i n coordinate system is in phase
with the reference input and signal. If the
Reference Phase shift is set to +45 degrees, then
the lock-in coordinate system rotates to +45
degrees from the reference input. Thus, the
reference input is now at -45 degrees from the
lock-in coordinate axes. Since the reference and
signal are in phase, the signal is now at -45
degrees with respect to the lock-in coordinates
and the Phase Output will be -45 degrees.
The sum of the Reference Phase shift and the
Phase Output is the absolute phase difference
between the signal and the reference input.
Therefore, the Phase Output may be offset to zero
by adjusting the Reference Phase shift. This is
sometimes necessary when the Phase Output is
near 180 degrees and varies between +180 and 180 degrees.
Output Channel 2
The CHANNEL 2 output is available at the right
hand OUTPUT BNC connector. The output
parameter is selected by the DISPLAY setting and
can be Y, Y OFST, Ø (phase), Ø (phase), YNOISE, or X6 (ext D/A). All outputs are ±10V full
scale when the EXPAND is off. With the EXPAND
on, the output is multipled by 10, effectively
increasing the full scale sensitivity by 10. (Ø and
X6 may not be expanded). The Ø (phase) output
is 50 mV/deg (20 deg per Volt) up to ±9 V (±180
deg). The output impedance is <1Ω and the
output current is limited to 20 mA.
The right hand analog meter always displays the
CHANNEL 2 OUTPUT voltage. Accuracy is 2% of
full scale.
The CHANNEL2 LCD display provides a read-out
of the displayed parameter in real units. The scale
of the displayed quantity is indicated by the four
scale LED's to the right of the display. This readout auto ranges and will reflect the sensitivity
added when the EXPAND function is on. When
displaying X6, the scale LED's are off and the
units are volts.
Rel Channel 2
Every time the REL key is pressed, the displayed
parameter is offset to zero. This is done by
loading the displayed parameter's offset with
minus one times the present output. If the output
is greater than 1.024 times full scale, the REL
function will not be able to zero the output. In this
case, the OFFSET ON LED will blink and the
offset value will be set to its maximum value.
The REL function and the manual OFFSET are
both ways to enter the offset value. After using
the REL key, the offset may be adjusted using the
manual OFFSET.
When the DISPLAY is Y, Y OFST, or Y NOISE,
the REL key sets the Y OFFSET (which affects
the Y (RSINØ) output). If Y NOISE is being
displayed, the REL function zeroes Y and the
noise output will require a few seconds to settle
again.
The REL key zeroes the X6 output when the
DISPLAY is D/A.
Auto Phase
When the DISPLAY is Ø (phase), the REL key
sets the Reference Phase Shift to the absolute
phase difference between the signal and the
reference. This is done by setting the Reference
Phase Shift to the sum of the Reference Phase
Shift and the present Phase Output. After autophase is performed, the Ø output will be 0 deg, R
will be unchanged, X will be maximized, and Y will
be minimized.
Offset Channel 2
The OFFSET section controls the manual offset.
The offset is turned ON and OFF using the upper
key in the OFFSET section. When the offset is
ON, the lower two keys are used to set the amount
of offset. A single key press will advance the
offset by 0.025% of full scale. If the key is held
13
down, the offset advances in larger and larger
increments, the largest increment being 10% of full
scale. When the offset is turned OFF the applied
offset returns to zero but the offset value is not
lost. The next press of the upper offset key (return
to ON) sets the offset to the previously entered
value.
If an attempt is made to advance the offset value
beyond full scale, the ON LED will blink. An offset
up to 1.024 times the full-scale sensitivity may be
entered. When the EXPAND is on, this is 10X the
full scale output.
Note that the offsets (either manual offset or those
generated by the REL function) represent a
fraction of the full scale reading, and so their
absolute value will change when the sensitivity
scale is changed. A signal which has been nulled
by an offset will not be nulled when the sensitivity
scale is changed. The analog meter and the
output BNC indicate the same value given by the
equation:
V
= 10Ae(AvVisinØ+Vos) {if the output is Y}
out
where...
Ae= 1 or 10 per the Expand
Av= 1/Sensitivity
Vi= magnitude of the signal
Ø= phase between signal & reference
Vos= offset (fraction of FS < 1.024)
Y (RSINØ) Output
The analog output, Y+Y
(RSINØ) BNC connector. An input signal equal in
magnitude to the selected sensitivity which is 90°
out of phase with the reference oscillator will
generate a 10V output. The output impedance is
<1Ω and the output current is limited to 20 mA.
The Y (RSINØ) output is affected by the Y offset
but may not be expanded. The Y (RSINØ) is not
affected by the DISPLAY setting except for two
cases. When the DISPLAY is set to Y OFST, the
Y (RSINØ) output is the Y offset. When the
DISPLAY is set to Y NOISE, the Y (RSINØ) output
has a bandwidth equal to the ENBW (1 or 10 Hz)
instead of the time constant.
, is available at the Y
ofst
Reference Input
The REFERENCE INPUT BNC is located in
REFERENCE INPUT section. The input is ac
coupled and the impedance is 1 MΩ. The dc
voltage at this input should not exceed 100 V and
the largest ac signal should be less than 10 V
peak.
Trigger Level
The TRIGGER MODE indicator toggles from
POSITIVE to SYMMETRIC to NEGATIVE when
the TRIGGER MODE key is pressed.
When the DISPLAY is Y, Y OFST, or Y NOISE,
the OFFSET keys adjust the Y OFFSET (which
affects the Y (RSINØ) output). When the
DISPLAY is Ø, the OFFSET keys do nothin g.
When the DISPLAY is X6, the OFFSET up and
down keys set the output voltage of D/A output X6
(also on the rear panel) up to ±10.24V.
Expand Channel 2
The output EXPAND is toggled by pressing the
key in the Channel 2 EXPAND section. The
expand status is indicated by the X10, expand on,
and the X1, expand off, LED's. Only the Channel
2 OUTPUT is affected, the Y (RSINØ) output is
not expanded. Ø and X6 may not be expanded.
If the center TRIGGER MODE LED is on, the
mode is SYMMETRIC and the reference oscillator
will lock to the positive zero crossings of the ac
reference input. The ac signal must be symmetric
(e.g. sine wave, square wave, etc.) and have a
peak to peak amplitude greater than 100 mV. A
signal with 1 Vrms amplitude is recommended.
The phase accuracy of the reference channel is
specified for a 1Vrms sinewave in the symmetric
trigger mode.
If the upper TRIGGER MODE LED is on, the
mode is POSITIVE. The trigger threshold is +1V
and the reference oscillator will lock to the positive
going transitions of the reference input. This
mode triggers on the rising edges of a TTL type
pulse train. The pulse width must be greater than
1 µS.
If the lower TRIGGER MODE LED is on, the mode
is NEGATIVE. The trigger threshold is -1V and
the reference oscillator will lock to the negative
14
going transitions of the reference input. This
mode triggers on a negative pulse train or on the
falling edges of a TTL type pulse train
(remembering that the input is ac coupled). The
pulse width must be greater than 1 µS.
Reference Mode
The REFERENCE MODE indicator toggles
between f and 2f whenever the MODE key is
pressed. When the MODE is f, the lock-in will
detect signals at the reference input frequency.
When the MODE is 2f, the lock-in detects signals
at twice the reference input frequency. In either
case, the reference oscillator has a maximum
frequency of 100 KHz, thus, when in the 2f mode,
the reference input frequency may not exceed 50
KHz.
Reference Display
The REFERENCE DIGITAL DISPLAY shows
either the reference oscillator frequency or phase
shift. The displayed parameter toggles between
the two whenever the SELECT key is pressed.
The appropriate scale indicator below the display
will be on. It is useful to check the frequency
display to verify that the lock-in has correctly
locked to your reference. The reference frequency
is measured to 1 part in 256 resolution at all
frequencies. The display reads .000 if there is no
reference input and 199.9 kHz if the input
frequency exceeds 105 kHz.
Phase Controls
The phase shift between the reference oscillator of
the lock-in and the reference input signal is set
using the four keys in the PHASE section. The
two keys below the FINE label inc r em ent the
phase setting in small amounts. A single key
press will change the phase by 0.025 degrees in
the desired direction. Holding the key down will
continue to change the phase with larger and
larger steps with the largest step being 10
degrees. The two 90° keys are used to change
the phase by 90 degree increments. The upper
key will add 90 degrees and the lower key will
subtract 90 degrees. Holding both keys down at
once sets the phase shift back to zero. The
REFERENCE DIGITAL DISPLAY automatically
displays the phase whenever any of the PHASE
keys are pressed. The phase ranges from -180
degrees to +180 degrees and is the phase delay
from the reference input signal.
Time Constant
There are two post demodulator low pass filters,
labeled PRE and POST. The PRE filter precedes
the POST filter in the output amplifier. Each filter
provides 6 dB/oct attenuation.
The PRE filter time constant ranges from 1 mS to
100 S and is selected by the two keys below the
PRE filter indicator LED's. Holding down either
key will advance the time constant four times a
second in the desired direction.
In many servo applications, no time constant is
needed. The SR530 may be modified to reduce
the output time constant to about 20 µS. Contact
the factory for details.
The POST filter time constant can be set to 1 S or
0.1 S, or can be removed altogether, NONE, using
the two keys below the ENBW indicators. When
set to NONE, the total attenuation is that of the
PRE filter, or 6 dB/oct. When the POST filter is 1
S or 0.1S, the total attenuation is 12 dB/oct for
frequency components beyond the larger of the
POST and PRE filter bandwidths (reciprocal time
constant).
Noise Measurements
When the DISPLAY is set to X NOISE Y NOISE,
none of the PRE and POST indicator LED's are
on. Instead, one of the two ENBW indic ators wil l
be on, showing the Equivalent Noise Bandwidth of
the rms noise calculation. The ENBW is set using
the keys below the ENBW indicator LED's (same
keys as used to set the POST filter). The PRE
filter keys do nothing in this case. Pressing the
upper key when the bandwidth is already 1 Hz will
reset the rms noise average (output) to zero,
restarting the calculation. Likewise with pressing
the lower key when 10 Hz is already selected.
The noise is the rms deviation of the output within
a 1 or 10 Hz equivalent noise bandwidth about the
reference frequency. A dc output does not
contribute to the noise, the noise is determined
only by the ac 'wiggles' at the output. By
measuring the noise at different frequ enci es , the
frequency dependence of the noise density can be
found. This usually has the form of v
The noise computation assumes that the noise
has a Gaussian distribution (such as Johnson
noise). Since the computation takes many time
constants (reciprocal ENBW), the noise output
noise ~
1/f.
15
should be allowed to approach a steady value
before a reading is taken. For the 1 Hz ENBW,
this time is on the order of 15 to 30 seconds; for
the 10 Hz ENBW, the output stabilizes much
faster. The noise output will vary slightly since
there will always be noise variations that are slow
compared to the bandwidth. Any DC component
in the output will not contribute to the noise.
However, a large DC output will cause the noise
computation to initially rise to a large value before
approaching the final answer. As a result, the
computation will take longer to settle.
If the OVLD indicator is blinking four times a
second, then either the X or Y output is
overloaded and the corresponding noise
calculation should be ignored. If the OVLD LED is
on continuously, then the input signal is
overloading the ac amplifier or time constant
filters. In this case, both noise outputs will be
wrong.
To obtain a value for the noise density, the noise
reading should be divided by the square root of
the ENBW. Thus, when the ENBW is 1 Hz, the
noise output is the noise density, and when the
ENBW is 10 Hz, the noise density is the noise
output divided by √10. For example, if the input
noise is measured to be 7 nV with the ENBW set
to 1 Hz, the noise density is 7 nV/√Hz. Switching
the ENBW to 10 Hz results in a faster
measurement and a reading of 22 nV on the
output. The noise density is 22 nV/√10 Hz or 7
nV/√Hz. At frequencies » 10 Hz, the noise density
should be independent of the ENBW.
Power
This is the instrument's POWER switch. When the
power is turned off, the front panel settings are
retained so that the instrument will return to the
same settings when the power is next turned on.
The SR530 always powers up in the LOCAL
mode.
The D/A out puts X5 and X6 are not retained
during power off. X5 always becomes the RATIO
output at power on and X6 is always reset to zero.
the instrument. All displays return to normal after
3 seconds.
Local and Remote
When the instrument is programmed via the
computer interface to be in the REMOTE state
WITHOUT LOCK-OUT, the LOCAL key will return
the instrument to LOCAL front panel control. If
the instrument is in the REMOTE WITH LOCK-OUT state, no front panel key will return the status
to LOCAL. In this case, a RETURN TO LOCAL
command must be sent over the computer
interface or the power must be turned off and back
on.
Defaults
If the LOCAL key is held down when the POWER
is turned on, the instrument settings will be set to
the defaults shown below instead of the settings in
effect when the power was turned off.
ParameterSetting
BANDPASSOUT
LINEOUT
LINE X 2OUT
SENSITIVITY500 mV
DYN RESLOW
DISPLAYSX Y
EXPANDSOFF
OFFSETSOFF (value=0)
PRE TIME CONSTANT100 mS
POST TIME CONSTANT 0.1 S
ENBW1 Hz
REFERENCE MODEf
TRIGGER MODESYMMETRIC
REFERENCE DISPLAYFREQUENCY
PHASE SHIFT0°
Whenever default values are used at power up,
the red ERR LED will turn on for about 3 seconds.
If the ERR LED is on when the instrument is
powered on without the LOCAL key down, then
the instrument is ignoring the retained settings.
This can be due to a low battery.
When the power is turned on, the CHANNEL 1
OUTPUT DIGITAL DISPLAY will show the
SERIAL NUMBER of the instrument and the
CHANNEL 2 OUTPUT DIGITAL DISPLAY willshow the firmware VERSION. The REFERENCE
DIGITIAL DISPLAY shows the model number of
16
SR530 Guide to Operation
PinVoltage
Current Available
Rear Panel
AC Power
The ac line voltage selector card, line fuse, and
line cord receptacle are located in the fuse holder
at the left side of the rear panel. See the section,
Preparation for Use at the front of this manual for
instructions on setting the ac voltage selector and
choosing the correct fuse.
GPIB Connector
The SR530 has an IEEE 488 (GPIB) interface built
in. The GPIB address is set using SW1 located to
the right of the interface connectors. Refer to
page 7 for switch setting details.
RS232 Connector
The SR530 has an RS232 interface. The
connector is configured as a DCE. The baud rate,
parity, stop bits, and echo mode are selected
using SW2 located to the right of the interface
connectors. Refer to Page 7 for switch setting
details.
Signal Monitor Output
This BNC provides the buffered output of the
signal amplifiers and filters. This is the signal just
before the demodulator. The output impedance is
<1Ω. When a full scale input is applied, the peakto-peak amplitude at this output is 20 mV, 200 mV
or 2 V for dynamic reserve settings of high, norm,
and low, respectively.
Preamp Connector
This 9 pin "D" connector provides power and
control signals to external peripherals such as preamplifiers. The available power is described
below.
1+20100 mA
2+510 mA
6-20100 mA
7Signal ground
8Digital ground
General Purpose A/D and D/A
There are four analog input ports, labele d X1
through X4. These inputs may be digitized and
read via the computer interfaces. The range is -
10.24 V to +10.24 V and the resolution is 2.5 mV.
The input impedance is 1 MΩ. A digitization can
be performed in about 3 mS but the result may
take longer to transmit over the interface being
used.
There are two analog output ports, labele d X5 and
X6. The voltages at these ports may be
programmed via the computer interfaces. The
range is -10.24 V to +10.24 V and the resolution is
2.5 mV. The output impedance is <1Ω and the
output current is limited to 20 mA.
Ratio
Output X5 is the ratio output when not
programmed by the computer interface or set via
the front panel. X5 becomes the ratio output
whenever the unit is turned on.
The voltage at X5 is the ratio of the Channel 1
Output to the analog voltage at port X1. An output
of 10 V corresponds to a ratio of 1. The ratio is
computed by digitizing the Channel 1 Output and
the voltage at port X1 and then taking the ratio.
The resolution is 2.5 mV. For best accuracy, the
sensitivity should be set to provide at least a 50%
full scale signal and the analog denominator (X1)
should be 5V or greater. The ratio is updated
approximately every 3 mS. For the Ratio feature
to work, the voltage at the denominator input must
exceed 40 mV.
When the DISPLAY is set to D/A, the ratio output
is 10 times the magnitude, R, divided by X1.
Internal Oscillator
The INTERNALOSCILLATOR is a voltage
controlled oscillator with a sine wave output . To
use the oscillator as the reference source, connect
17
the REF OUTPUT on the rear panel to the REF
INPUT on the front panel. The REF OUTPUT is a
1 Vrms sine wave. The SINE OUTPUT may be
used as the stimulus to the experiment. The SINEOUTPUT can be set to three amplitudes, 1 V, 100
mV, and 10 mV (rms) using the amplitude switch.
The output impedance is 600Ω. The AMP CAL
screw adjusts the amplitude.
The oscillator frequency is controlled by the VCOINPUT voltage. A voltage from 0V to 10V will
adjust the frequency according to the VCORANGE selected. Three ranges are available, 1
Hz/V, 100 Hz/V, and 10 KHz/V. The input
impedance is 10 kΩ. The FREQUENCY CAL
screw adjusts the frequency.
There are four ways to set the frequency:
1) Connect X5 or X6 (D/A outputs) to the VCOINPUT. The frequency can now be set from the
front panel by setting the DISPLAY to D/A and
adjusting X5 or X6. The frequency is also
controllable via the computer interfaces by
programming X5 or X6.
2) If the VCO INPUT is left open, then the
oscillator will run at the top of its range (i.e. 10 Hz,
1 KHz, or 100 KHz).
3) A 10 KΩ potentiometer may be connected from
the VCO INPUT to ground. This pot will then set
the frequency.
4) Connect the VCO INPUT to an external voltage
source which can provide 0 to 10V.
In all four cases, if the REF OUTPUT is connected
to the REFERENCE INPUT on the front panel, the
frequency may be read on the front panel
REFERENCE DIGITAL DISPLAY or via the
computer interfaces.
18
SR530 Guide to
Programming
An example of a multiple command is:
G 5; T 1,4; P 45.10 <cr>
The SR530 Lock-in Amplifier is remotely
programmable via both RS232 and GPIB
interfaces. It may be used with laboratory
computers or simply with a terminal. All front
panel features (except signal input selection and
power) may be controlled and read via the
computer interfaces. The SR530 can also read
the analog outputs of other laboratory instruments
using its four general purpose analog input ports.
There are also two programmable analo g outpu t
ports available to provide general purpose control
voltages.
Communicating with the SR530
Before using either the RS232 or GPIB interface,
the appropriate configuration switches need to be
set. There are two banks of 8 switches, SW1 and
SW2, located on the rear panel. SW1 sets the
GPIB address and SW2 sets the RS232
parameters. The configuration switches are read
continuously and any changes will be effective
immediately. For details on switch settings, see
page 7 at the front of this manual.
Command Syntax
Communications with the SR530 use ASCII
characters. Commands to the SR530 may be in
either UPPER or lower case.
It is not necessary to wait between commands.
The SR530 has a command input buffer of 256
characters and processes the commands in the
order received. Likewise, the SR530 has an
output buffer (for each interface) of 256
characters.
In general, if a command is sent without
parameters, it is interpreted as a request to read
the status of the associated function or setting.
Values returned by the SR530 are sent as a string
of ASCII characters terminated usually by carriage
return, line-feed. For example, after the above
command is sent, the following read commands
would generate the responses shown below.
Command Response from the SR530
G <cr>5<cr><lf>
T 1 <cr>4<cr><lf>
P <cr>45.10<cr><lf>
The choice of terminating characters sent by the
SR530 is determined by which interface is being
used and whether the 'echo' feature is in use. The
terminating sequence for the GPIB interface is
always <cr><lf> (with EOI). The default sequence
for RS232 is <cr> when the echo mode is off, and
<cr><lf> when the echo mode is on. The
terminating sequence for the RS232 interface may
be changed using the J command.
A command to the SR530 consists of one or two
command letters, arguments or parameters if
necessary, and an ASCII carriage return (<cr>) or
line-feed (<lf>) or both. The different parts of the
command do not need to be separated by spaces.
If spaces are included, they will be ignored. If
more than one parameter is required by a
command, the parameters must be separated by
a comma. Examples of commands are:
G 5 <cr>set the sensitivity to 200 nV
T 1,4 <cr> set the pre filter to 30 mS
F <cr>read the reference frequency
P 45.10 <cr>set phase shift to 45.10¡
X 5,-1.23E-1 <cr>set port X5 to -0.123 V
Multiple commands may be sent on a single line.
The commands must be separated by a semicolon
(;) character. The commands will not be executed
until the terminating carriage return is sent.
Note that the terminating characters are sent with
each value returned by the SR530. Thus, the
response to the command string G;T1;P<cr> while
using the RS232 non-echo mode would be
5<cr>4<cr>45.10<cr>.
Front Panel Status LED's
The ACT LED flashes whenever the SR530 is
sending or receiving characters over the computer
interfaces.
The ERR LED flashes whenever an error has
occurred, such as, an illegal command has been
received, a parameter is out of range, or a
communication buffer has exceeded 240
characters. This LED flashes for about three
seconds on power-up if the battery voltage is
insufficient to retain previous instrument settings.
19
The REM LED is on whenever the SR530 is
programmed to be in the remote state.
RS232 Echo and No Echo
Operation
In order to allow the SR530 to be operated from a
terminal, an echo feature has been included which
causes the unit to echo back commands received
over the RS232 port. This feature is enabled by
setting switch 6 on SW2 to the DOWN position. In
this mode, the SR530 will send line-feeds in
addition to carriage returns with each value
returned and will also send the prompts 'OK>' and
'?>' to indicate that the previous command line
was either processed or contained an error.
Operating the SR530 from a terminal is an ideal
way to learn the commands and responses before
attempting to program a computer to control the
SR530. When the unit is controlled by a
computer, the echo feature should be turned off to
prevent the sending of spurious characters which
the computer is not expecting.
Try-Out with an ASCII Terminal
Before attempting any detailed programming with
the SR530, it is best to try out the commands
using a terminal. Connect a terminal with an
RS232 port to the RS232 connector on the rear
panel of the SR530. A 'straight' RS232 cable is
required since the SR530 is a DCE and the
terminal is a DTE. Set the baud rate, parity, and
stop bits to match the terminal by setting SW2 per
the switch setting table given on page 7. The
echo mode should be enabled (switch 6 DOWN).
After setting SW2 and connecting the terminal,
hold down the LOCAL key while turning the unit
on. This causes the SR530 to assume its default
settings so that the following discussion will agree
with the actual responses of the SR530. The ACT
and ERR LED's on the front panel will flash for a
second and the sign-on message will appear on
the terminal. Following the message, the prompt
'OK>' will be displayed. This indicates that the
SR530 is ready to accept commands.
DIGITAL DISPLAY. Typing the phase read
command, P<cr>, will now return the string 45.00
to the terminal.
Now read the gain using the sensitivity read
command, G<cr>. The response should be 24
meaning that the sensitivity is at the 24th setting or
500 mV. Change the sensitivity by typing
G19<cr>. The sensitivity should now be 10 mV.
Check the front panel to make sure this is so.
The Channel 1 Output of the lock-in is read by
typing the command, Q1<cr>. The response is a
signed floating point number with up to 5
significant digits plus a signed exponent. Change
the gain to 10 uV using the G10 command. The
response to the Q1 command will now be similar
to the previous one except that the exponent is
different.
Attach a DC voltmeter to the X6 output on the rear
panel. The range should allow for 10V readings.
The voltage at the X6 output can be set using the
X6 command. Type X6,5.0<cr> and the X6 output
will change to 5.0V. To read this back to the
terminal, just type X6<cr>. When setting the X6
voltage, the voltage may be sent as an integer (5),
real (5.000), or floating point (0.500E1) number.
Now connect the X6 output to the X1 input (a ls o
on the rear panel). X1 through X4 are analog
input ports. To read the voltage on X1, simply
type X1<cr>. The response 5.000 should appear
on the terminal. The analog ports X1 through X6
can be used by your computer to read outputs of
other instruments as well as to control other
laboratory parameters.
At this point, the user should experiment with a
few of the commands. A detailed command list
follows.
Type the letter 'P' followed by a carriage return
(P<cr>). The SR530 responds by sending to the
terminal the characters 0.00 indicating that the
phase is set to 0 degrees. In general, a command
with no arguments or parameters reads a setting
of the unit. To set the phase to 45 degrees, type
the command, P45<cr>. To see that the phase
did change, use the SELECT key on the front
panel to display the phase on the REFERENCE
20
SR530 Command List
The leading letters in each command sequence
specify the command. The rest of the sequence
consists of parameters. Multiple parameters are
separated by a comma. Those parameters shown
in {} are optional while those without {} are
required. The variables m and n represent
integers while v represents a real number.
Parameters m and n must be expressed in integer
format while v may be in integer, real, or floating
point format.
AX
AY
AR
AP
The A command causes the auto offset (rel)
function to execute. Auto offset is performed by
reading the output and using that value as the
appropriate offset. Every time an "AX" command
is received, the auto offset function is executed on
the X output. The "AY" command auto offsets the
Y output. The "AR" command auto offsets the R
output. Note that "AX" and "AY" will affect the R
output but "AR" will not affect X and Y. The "AP"
command will execute the auto-phase routine.
This is done by setting the reference phase shift
with the present phase difference between the
signal and the reference input. The ¯ output then
reads zero and the reference display reads the
signal phase shift. "AP" maximizes X and
minimizes Y but R is unaffected. The A
commands may be issued at any time, regardless
of the DISPLAY setting.
B {n}
If n is "1", the B command sets the bandpass filter
in. If n is "0", the bandpass filter is taken out. If n
is absent, then the bandpass filter status is
returned.
C {n}
If n is "1", the C command sets the reference LCD
display to show the phase setting. If n is "0", the
LCD will display the reference frequency. If n is
absent, the parameter being displayed (frequency
or phase) is returned. Note that the P and F
commands are used to read the actual values of
the phase and frequency.
D {n}
If n is included, the D command sets the dynamic
reserve. If n is absent, the dynamic reserve
setting is returned.
nDyn
0LOW
1 NORM
2 HIGH
Note that not all dynamic reserve settings are
allowed at every sensitivity.
E m {,n}
The E command sets and reads the status of the
output expands. If m is "1", then Channel 1 is
selected, if m is "2", Channel 2 is selected. The
parameter m is required. If n is "1", the E
command expands the selected output channel. If
n is "0", the expand is turned off for the selected
channel. If n is absent, the expand status of the
selected channel is returned. Note that the
expands do not affect the X and Y BNC outputs,
only the Channel 1 and 2 outputs.
F
The F command reads the reference frequency.
For example, if the reference frequency is 100 Hz,
the F command returns the string "100.0". If the
reference frequency is 100.0 kHz, the string
"100.0E+3" is returned. The F command is a read
only command.
G {n}
If n is included, the G command sets the gain
(sensitivity). If n is absent, the gain setting is
returned.
Note that sensitivity settings below 100 nV are
allowed only when a pre-amplifier is connected.
H
The H command reads the pre-amplifier status.
If a pre-amplifier is connected, a "1" is returned,
otherwise, a "0" is returned. The H command is a
read only command.
I {n}
If n is included, the I command sets the remotelocal status. If n is absent, the remote-local status
is returned.
nStatus
0Local: all front panel keys are operative
1 Remote: front panel keys are not
operative. The LOCAL key returns the
status to local.
2 Lock-out: front panel keys are not
operative. No key returns the status to
local. Another I command is needed to
return to local.
When using the GPIB interface, the REN, LLO,
and GTL commands are not implemented. The I
command is used by both interfaces to set the
remote-local status.
J {n1,n2,n3,n4}
The J command sets the RS232 end-of-record
characters sent by the SR530 to those specified
by the decimal ASCII codes n1-n4. If no argument
is included, the end-of-record sequence returns to
the default (a carriage return), otherwise, up to
four characters may be specified. The end-ofrecord required by the SR530 when receiving
commands is not affected.
K n
The K command simulates a front panel key
press. The effect is exactly the same as pressing
the selected key once. The parameter n is
required.
nKey
1Post Time Constant Up
2Post Time Constant Down
3Pre Time Constant Up
4Pre Time Constant Down
5Select Display (f/phase)
690° Up
790° Down
8Zero Phase (Simultaneous 90° Up and
Down)
9Reference Trigger Mode
10 Reference Mode (f/2f)
11 Degrees Up
12 Degrees Down
13 Channel 2 Rel
14 Channel 2 Offset (On/Off)
15 Channel 2 Offset Up
16 Channel 2 Offset Down
17 Channel 2 Expand
18 Output Display Up
19 Output Display Down
20 Channel 1 Expand
21 Channel 1 Rel
22 Channel 1 Offset (On/Off)
23 Channel 1 Offset Up
24 Channel 1 Offset Down
25 Dyn Res Up
26 Dyn Res Down
27 Sensitivity Up
28 Sensitivity Down
29 Local
30 Line X 2 Notch Filter
31 Line Notch Filter
32 Bandpass Filter
L m {,n}
The L command sets and reads the status of the
line notch filters. If m is "1", then the 1X line
notch is selected, if m is "2", the 2X line notch is
selected. The parameter m is required. If n is "1",
the L command sets the selected filter in. If n is
"0", the selected filter is taken out. If n is absent,
the status of the selected filter is returned.
M {n}
If n is "1", the M command sets the reference
mode to 2f. If n is "0", the reference mode is set
to f. If n is absent, the reference mode is returned.
N {m}
If m is "1", the N command sets the ENBW to 10
Hz. If m is "0", the ENBW is set to 1 Hz. If m is
absent, the ENBW setting is returned.
OX {n} {,v}
OY {n} {,v}
OR {n} {,v}
The "OX", "OY", and "OR" commands set the
offsets for the X, Y, and R outputs respectively. If
n is "1", the offset is turned on. If n is "0", the
offset is turned off. If n and v are absent, the
offset status (on or off) is returned. (The value of
the offset is read using the S and Q commands.)
22
If n is included, then v may be sent also. v is the
offset value up to plus or minus full scale in units
of volts. For example, to offset half of full scale on
the 100 µV sensitivity, v should be "50.0E-6" or an
equivalent value. However, if the sensitivity is
then changed to 200 µV, the offset is now half of
the new full scale or 100 µV. When the sensitivity
is changed, the offset is preserved as a constant
fraction of full scale rather than as a voltage
referred to the input. The expand function will, on
the other hand, preserve the value of the offset as
an input referred voltage. Once a value of v is
sent, the offsets may be turned off and on without
losing the offset values by using the O commands
without the v parameter. Note that the X and Y
offsets will affect the R output but the R offset
does not affect the X or Y output.
P {v}
If v is absent, the P command returns the
reference phase shift setting from -180 to +180
degrees. When v is included, the phase is set to
the value of v up to ±999 degrees.
Q1
Q2
QX
QY
The Q commands return the output values in
units of volts or degrees. For an input signal of 50
µV on a full scale sensitivity of 100 µV, a Q
command will return the string "50.00E-6". "Q1"
and "Q2" read the parameters being shown on the
Channel 1 and Channel 2 output displays as
selected with the S command. "QX" and "QY"
read the X (RCOS Ø) and Y (RSIN Ø) BNC
outputs.
R {n}
If n is included, the R command sets the
reference input trigger mode. If n is absent, the
trigger mode is returned.
2RØ
3R OffsetØ
4X NoiseY Noise
5X5 (D/A)X6 (D/A)
T m {,n}
The T command sets and reads the status of the
time constants. If m is "1", the pre time constant
is selected, if m is "2", the post time constant is
selected. The parameter m is required. If n is
included, the T command sets the selected time
constant. If n is absent, the setting of the selected
time constant is returned.
nPre Time Constant (m=1)
11 mS
23 mS
310 mS
430 mS
5100 mS
6300 mS
71 S
83 S
910 S
10 30 S
11 100 S
nPost Time Constant (m=2)
0none
1 0.1 S
21S
U m {,n}
The U command sets and reads the unit's
calibration bytes. m is the address offset of the
byte, 0-511. If n is absent, the value of the
addressed calibration byte is returned. If n is
included, the addressed calibration byte is set to
the value of n, 0-255. The new value will be in
effect until the power is turned off or a reset
command is issued. Use of this command is not
recommended.
nMode
0ositive
1 Symmetric
2 Negative
S {n}
If n is included, the S command selects the
parameters shown on the Channel 1 and 2 analog
meters, output digital displays, and output BNC's.
If n is absent, the displayed parameter is returned.
nChannel 1
0XY
1X OffsetY Offset
Channel 2
V {n}
If n is included, the V command sets the GPIB
SRQ (service request) mask to the value n (0-
255). If n is absent, the value of the SRQ mask is
returned.
W {n}
The W command sets and reads the RS232
character wait interval. If n is included, the SR530
will wait nx4 mS between characters sent over the
RS232 interface. This allows slow computer
interfaces to keep up. n can range from 0 to 255.
If n is absent, the wait value is returned. The wait
interval is set to 6 on power-up.
23
X n {,v}
n designates one of the 6 general purpose analog
ports located on the rear panel. If n is 1,2,3, or 4,
the X command will return the voltage on the
designated analog input port (X1-X4) in volts. If n
is 5 or 6, then v may also be sent. If v is included,
the designated analog output port (X5 or X6) will
be set to v volts where v has the range -10.238V
to +10.238V. If v is absent, the output value of the
selected port is returned. On power-up, port X5 is
the ratio output. An "X 5" command will read the
ratio output. An "X 5" command with the
parameter v will set port X5 to v volts, overriding
the ratio output. Port X5 will return to the ratio
output on power-up or reset.
Y {n}
The Y command reads the status byte. (See the
following section for a definition of the Status
Byte.) n designates one bit, 0-7, of the status
byte. If n is included, the designated bit of the
status byte is returned. The bit which is read is
then reset. If n is absent, the value of the entire
byte is returned and all status bits are then reset.
This status byte may also be read over the GPIB
using the serial poll command.
Z
The Z command causes an internal reset. All
settings return to the default values shown on
page 15. The ERR LED will be on for about three
seconds to indicate that the stored instrument
settings are being ignored. If the RS232 echo
mode is on, the sign-on message is sent over the
RS232 interface.
Status Byte
The SR530 maintains an 8-bit status register
which the user may read to obtain information on
the unit's status. The status byte may be read in
two ways: by sending the Y command, which
returns the value of the byte in ASCII coded
decimal, or, when using the GPIB, by performing a
serial poll. The returned status byte reflects all of
the status conditions which have occurred since
the last time the byte was read. After the status
byte has been read, it is cleared. Thus, the status
byte should be read initially to clear all previous
conditions (especially after a power up or after
settings have been changed).
The definitions for each bit of the status byte are
given below:
Bit 0
Not Used
Bit 1
Command Parameter Out of Range. This bit is
set if a parameter associated with a command is
not in the allowed range.
Bit 2
No Reference. This bit is set when no reference
input is detected, either because the amplitude is
too low or the frequency is out of range.
Bit 3
Unlock. This bit is set when the reference
oscillator is not locked to the reference input. If
there is no reference input, bit 2 (no reference) will
be set but bit 3 (unlock) may not be.
Bit 4
Overload. This bit is set if there is a signal
overload. This can happen when the sensitivity is
too high, the dynamic reserve is too low, the offset
is on, or the expand is on. Overloads on the
general purpose A/D inputs or the ratio output are
not detected.
Bit 5
Auto Offset Out of Range. This bit is set if the
auto offset function cannot zero the output
because the output exceeded 1.024X full scale.
Bit 6
SRQ. This bit is set if the SR530 has generated
an SRQ on the GPIB interface. This bit is reset
after the SR530 has been serial polled. This bit is
set only for status reads via a serial poll, ie., Bit 6
always zero for the RS232 .
Bit 7
Command Error. This bit is set when an illegal
command string is received.
Errors
Whenever a 'parameter out of range' or an
'unrecognized command' error occurs, the
appropriate status bits are set and the ERR LED
flashes. In addition, any commands remaining on
the current command line (up to the next <cr>) are
lost. The ERR LED will also light if any of the
internal communication buffers overflows. This
occurs when 240 characters are pending on the
command queue or output queue. The ERR LED
will go off as soon as all buffers drop below 200
24
characters again.
Reset
The Z command resets the unit to its default state.
The default front panel settings are listed in the
DEFAULTS section of the Guide to Operations.
In addition, the interface status returns to LOCAL,
the SRQ mask is cleared, the RS232 character
WAIT interval is set to 6, and the terminating
sequence is reset to the proper defaults.
The command and output buffers are cleared by
the Z command. Therefore, it is bad practice to
use the Z command before all previous commands
have been processed and all responses have
been received.
Trouble-Shooting Interface
Problems
If you are having difficulty getting your computer to
communicate with the SR530 look to the sections
on the RS232 and GPIB interfaces for some tips
specific to your particular interface.
An ASCII terminal is a valuable aid for debugging
interface problems. You can use it to:
1) become familiar with the SR530's
command structure,
2) see GPIB bus transactions by using the
GPIB echo mode,
3) eavesdrop on transactions when using the
RS232 interface,
4) substitute a human for the SR530 by using
a null modem cable ( to make the DTE a
DCE) and attaching the terminal to the
port to which you would normally have
connected the SR530. This allows you to
test your program's responses to inputs
which you provide from the terminal.
Common Hardware Problems include:
mode should be off when not debugging
the GPIB interface.)
3) Your computer requires an RS232 control
line to be asserted, but your cable does
not pass it between the SR530 and the
computer, or, your computer is not
asserting the DTR line on the RS232.
Common Software Problems include:
1) You have sent the wrong command to ask
for data from the SR530. Your program
will wait forever for a response which is
not going to come. This may not be your
fault; we have seen Microsoft's Interpreted
Basic on the IBM PC occasionally send a
curly bracket (ASCII 253) when it was
supposed to have sent a carriage return
(ASCII 13).
2) Your computer's baud rate has been
changed and no longer matches the
SR530's baud rate.
3) The initial command sent to the SR530
was invalid due to a garbage character left
in the command queue from power-up, or,
the first character in you computer's UART
is garbage, also due to power-up. It is
good practice to send a few carriage
returns to the SR530 when your program
begins, and have your program clear-out
its UART at the start of your program.
4) The SR530 is not sending the correct
'end-of- record' marker for your computer.
For example, it appears that Microsoft's
Rev 3.2 FORTRAN on the IBM PC under
DOS 2.1 requires two carriage returns for
an end-of-record marker. The J command
can be used to set the SR530 end-ofrecord marker to 2 carriag e returns. [The
end-of-record marker is that sequence
which indicates that the response is
complete. From the keyboard, a single
carriage return is the end-of-record
marker.]
1) The RS232 or GPIB cables are not
properly attached.
2) The configuration switches for the RS232
characteristics or GPIB address are not
set correctly (Make sure the RS232 echo
is off when using the RS232 interface with
a computer. The GPIB with RS232 echo
5) Answers are coming back from the SR530
too fast, overwriting the end-of-record
markers, and causing the computer to
hang waiting for a complete response. In
this case, the W command can be used to
slow down the response time of the
SR530 preventing overwriting.
25
6) Answers are coming back from the SR530
too slowly due to the W6 default setting for
the character interval time. Use the W
command to speed up the transmission
from the SR530. This can cause
problems for the GPIB interface if the echo
mode is on (switch 6 of SW1).
The SR530 with the RS232
Interface
command is:
J {n1,n2,n3,n4}
where n1, n2, n3, and n4 are decimal values
between 0 and 255 corresponding to the ASCII
codes of the desired termination characters. For
instance, if the desired termination sequence is an
asterisk, (ASCII 42), two carriage returns, (ASCII
13), and a line-feed, (ASCII 10), the appropriate
command is:
The RS232 is a popular serial interface standard
for bit serial communication. Despite the
existence of the standard there are many
permutations of control lines, baud rates, and data
formats. If you do not have a lot of experience
interfacing RS232 equipment you should read
Appendix B for a description of the RS232 and
interfacing tips.
Data Communications Equipment
(DCE)
The SR530 is configured as DCE so that it may be
connected directly to a terminal. If the SR530 is to
be interfaced with another DCE device, a special
cable (sometimes referred to as a 'modem' cable)
is required. To use the RS232 interface you must
set the switches in SW2 to match your computer's
baud rate, parity, and number of stop bits. Refer
to Page 7 for details.
Wait Command
The SR530 normally waits until the RS232 'Clear
to Send' control line (CTS) is asserted before
sending characters. However, some computers
do not set and reset the CTS line, possibly
causing the SR530 to send data when the
computer is not ready to read it. The SR530 may
be 'slowed down' using the W command. Sending
'Wn' causes the unit to wait nx4 mS before
sending each character over the RS232 bus. The
command W0 sets the wait interval to zero and
results in the fastest transmission. The wait
interval is set to 6 (24 mS)on power-up.
J 42,13,13,10
If a G command is sent requiring an answer of 24
(sensitivity = 500 mV), the SR530 would respond
with the string
24*<cr><cr><lf>
Up to four terminating characters may be specified
by the J command. If no arguments are sent with
the J command, the terminating sequence returns
to the default (echo on: <cr><lf>; echo off: <cr>).
The J command does not affect the terminating
character (<cr>) required at the end of commands
received by the SR530. It also does not affect the
terminating sequence sent with data over the
GPIB interface.
The SR530 with the GPIB
Interface
For a brief introduction to the GPIB standard,
please read Appendix C at the back of this
manual. Before using the GPIB interface you
must set the switches in SW1 per the instructions
on page 7.
GPIB Capabilities
The GPIB capabilities of the SR530 consistent
with IEEE standard 488 (1978) are shown in the
table below. Also shown are the responses of the
SR530 to some standard commands.
Termination Sequences
The default RS232 termination characters are
sufficient to interface with most computers,
however, it will occasionally be necessary to send
special terminating sequences to fit the
requirements of some computers. This can be
done with the J command. The format for the
CodeFunction
SH1Source handshake cap ab ility
AH1Acceptor handshake capability
T5Basic Talker, Serial Poll, Unaddressed to
talk if addressed to listen
L4Basic Listener, Unaddressed to listen if
addressed to talk
SR1Service request capability
PP0No parallel poll capability
26
DC1Device Clear capabilit y
RL0REN,LLO, GTL not implemen ted.
DCLDevice ClearSame as Z command
SDCSelectedSame as Z command
Device Clear
SPESerial PollSend Status Byte,
Enable& clear status byte
Because the SR530 can be controlled by an
RS232 interface as well as the GPIB, the remotelocal functions are not standard. There is no local
with lock out state. When in the local state,
remote commands are processed, even without
the REN command being issued. This is because
the RS232 interface has no provision for bus
commands and remote commands over the
RS232 interface would never be enabled.
Serial Polls and Service Requests
The status byte sent by the SR530 when it is serial
polled is the same status byte which is read using
the Y command (except for bit 6, SRQ). Ofcourse,
when the SR530 is serial polled, it does not
encode the status byte as a decimal number. The
SR530 can be programmed to generate a service
request (SRQ) to the GPIB controller every time a
given status condition occurs. This is done using
the V{n} command. The mask byte, n (0-255), is
the SRQ mask byte. The mask byte is always
logically ANDED with the status byte. If the result
is non-zero, the SR530 generates an SRQ and
leaves the status byte unchanged until the
controller performs a serial poll to determine the
cause of the service request. When the unit has
been serial polled, the status byte is reset to
reflect all of the status conditions which have
occurred since the SRQ was generated.
Any SRQ generated by the 'no reference, 'unlock',
'overload', and 'auto over-range' conditions will
also reset the corresponding bit in the SRQ mask
byte. This is to prevent a constant error condition
(such as no reference applied to the input) from
continually interrupting the controller. When such
an SRQ occurs, the controller should change
some parameter so as to solve the problem, and
then re-enable the SRQ mask bit again using the
V command.
GPIB with RS232 Echo Mode
It is sometimes useful when debugging a GPIB
system to have some way of monitoring exactly
what is going back and forth over the bus. The
SR530 has the capability to echo all characters
sent and received over the GPIB to its RS232 port.
This mode of operation is enabled by setting
switch 6 of SW1 to the DOWN position. The baud
rate, stop bits, and parity of the RS232 port are
still set by SW2. Of course, the RS232 port
operates at much lower speeds than the GPIB and
will slow down the GPIB data rate in this mode.
(Use the W0 command to allow the RS232
interface to run at full speed, otherwise, the GPIB
transactions may take so long that the controller
can hang.) During actual use, this mode should
be disabled.
The SR530 with BOTH Interfaces
If both interfaces are connected, commands may
be received from either interface. Responses are
always sent to the source of the request (except in
GPIB echo mode). It is unwise to send commands
from the two interfaces at the same time since the
characters from different sources can become
interleaved on the command queue and result in
'unrecognized command' errors.
For example, if we want to generate an SRQ
whenever there is an overload or unlock condition,
we need an SRQ mask byte equal to 00011000
binary, or 24 decimal ("V24" command). The byte
00011000 binary corresponds to the status byte
with the 'no reference' and 'unlock' status bits set.
If an overload occurs, then an SRQ will be
generated. The serial poll will return a status byte
showing SRQ and overload. If an unlock condition
occurs before the serial poll is concluded, another
SRQ will be generated as soon as the serial poll is
finished. A second serial poll will reflect the unlock
condition.
27
The Lock-in Technique
The Lock-in technique is used to detect and
measure very small ac signals. A Lock-in amplifier
can make accurate measurements of small signals
even when the signals are obscured by noise
sources which may be a thousand times larger.
Essentially, a lock-in is a filter with an arbitrarily
narrow bandwidth which is tuned to the frequency
of the signal. Such a filter will reject most
unwanted noise to allow the signal to be
measured. A typical lock-in application may
require a center frequency of 10 KHz and a
bandwidth of 0.01 Hz. This 'filter' has a Q of 10
well beyond the capabilities of passive electronic
filters.
In addition to filtering, a lock-in also provides gain.
For example, a 10 nanovolt signal can be
amplified to produce a 10 V output--a gain of one
billion.
All lock-in measurements share a few basic
principles. The technique requires that the
experiment be excited at a fixed frequency in a
relatively quiet part of the noise spectrum. The
lock-in then detects the response from the
experiment in a very narrow bandwidth at the
excitation frequency.
Applications include low level light detection, Hall
probe and strain gauge measurement, micro-ohm
meters, C-V testing in semiconductor research,
electron spin and nuclear magnetic resonance
studies, as well as a host of other situations which
require the detection of small ac signals.
6
-
A Measurement Example
Suppose we wish to measure the resistance of a
material, and we have the restriction that we must
not dissipate very much power in the sample. If
the resistance is about 0.1Ω and the current is
restricted to 1 µA, then we would expect a 100 nV
signal from the resistor. There are many noise
signals which would obscure this small signal -60Hz noise could easily be 1000 times larger, and
dc potentials from dissimilar metal junctions could
be larger still.
In the block diagram shown below we use a
1Vrms sine wave generator at a frequency wr as
our reference source. This source is current
limited by the 1 MΩ resistor to provide a 1 µA ac
excitation to our 0.1Ω sample.
Two signals are provided to the lock-in. The
1VAC reference is used to tell the lock-in the exact
frequency of the signal of interest. The lock-in's
Phase-Lock Loop (PLL) circuits will track this input
signal frequency without any adjustment by the
user. The PLL has two outputs, cos(wrt) and
sin(wrt).
The signal, Vs cos(wst+Ø), from the sample under
test is amplified by a high gain ac coupled
differential amplifier. The output of this amplifier is
multiplied by the PLL outputs in two PhaseSensitive Detectors (PSD1 and PSD2). This
multiplication shifts each frequency component of
the input signal, ws, by the reference frequency,
wr, so that the output of the PSD's are given by:
28
Vpsd1 = Vs cos(wrt) cos(wst+Ø)
= 1/2 Vs cos[(wr + ws)t+Ø] +
1/2 Vs cos[(wr - ws)t+Ø]
Vpsd2 = Vs sin(wrt) cos(wst+Ø)
= 1/2 Vs sin[(wr + ws)t+Ø] +
1/2 Vs sin[(wr - ws)t+Ø]
The sum frequency component of each PSD is
attenuated by a low pass filter, and only those
difference frequency components within the low
pass filter's narrow bandwidth will pass through to
the dc amplifiers. Since the low pass filter can
have time constants up to 100 seconds, the lock-in
can reject noise which is more than .0025 Hz
away from the reference frequency input.
For signals which are in phase with the reference
(¯=0¡), the output of PSD1 will be a maximum and
the output of PSD2 will be zero. If the phase is
non-zero, Vpsd1 ~ cos(Ø) and Vpsd2 ~ sin(°).
The magnitude output is given by,
R = {(V
and is independent of the phase Ø. The phase
output is defined as
Ø = - tan-1(V
Thus, a dual-phase lock-in can measure the
amplitude of the signal, independent of the phase,
as well as measure an unknown phase shift
between the signal and the reference.
psd1
)2 + (V
psd2
psd2
/ V
)2}
psd1
1/2
)
~ Vs
Understanding the Specifications
The table below lists some specifications for the
SR530 lock-in amplifier. Also listed are the error
contributions due to each of these items. The
specifications will allow a measurement with a 2%
accuracy to be made in one minute.
We have chosen a reference frequency of 5 kHz
so as to be in a relatively quiet part of the noise
spectrum. This frequency is high enough to avoid
low frequency '1/f' noise as well as line noise. The
frequency is low enough to avoid phase shifts and
amplitude errors due to the RC time constant of
the source impedance and the cable capacitance.
The full-scale sensitivity of 100 nV matches the
expected signal from our sample. The sensitivity
is calibrated to 1%. The instrument's output
stability also affects the measurement accuracy.
For the required dynamic reserve, the output
stability is 0.1%/°C. For a 10°C temperature
change we can expect a 1% error.
A front-end noise of 7 nV/√Hz will manifest itself
as a 1.2 nVrms noise after a 10 second low-pass
filter since the equivalent noise bandwidth of a
single pole filter is 1/4RC. The output will
converge exponentially to the final value with a 10second time constant. If we wait 50 seconds, the
output will have come to within 0.7% of its final
value.
The dynamic reserve of 60 dB is required by our
expectation that the noise will be a thousand times
larger than the signal. Additional dynamic reserve
is available by using the bandpass and notch
filters.
A phase-shift error of the PLL tracking circuits will
cause a measurement error equal to the cosine of
the phase shift error. The SR530's 1° phase
accuracy will not make a significant contribution to
the measurement error.
Specifications for the Example Measurement
Specification Value Error
Full Scale Sensitivity 100 nV
Dynamic Reserve 60 dB
Reference Frequency 5 kHz
Gain Accuracy 1% 1%
Output Stability 0.1%/°C 1%
Front-End Noise < 7 nV/√Hz 1.2%
Output Time Constant > 10 S 0.7%
Total RMS Error 2%
Shielding and Ground Loops
In order to achieve the 2% accuracy given in this
measurement example, we will have to be careful
to minimize the various noise sources which can
be found in the laboratory. (See Appendix A for a
brief discussion on noise sources and shielding)
While intrinsic noise (Johnson noise, 1/f noise and
alike) is not a problem in this measurement, other
noise sources could be a problem. These noise
sources can be reduced by proper shielding.
There are two methods for connecting the lock-in
to the experiment: the first method is more
convenient, but the second eliminates spurious
pick-up more effectively.
29
In the first method, the lock-in uses the A input in a
'quasi-differential' mode. Here, the lock-in detects
the signal as the voltage between the center and
outer conductors of the A input. The lock-in does
not force A's shield to ground, rather it is
connected to the lock-in's ground via a 10Ω
resistor. Because the lock-in must sense the
shield voltage (in order to avoid the large ground
loop noise between the experiment and the lockin) any noise pickup on the shield will appear as
noise to the lock-in. For a low impedance source
(as is the case here) the noise picked up by the
shield will also appear on the center conductor.
This is good, because the lock-in's 100 dB CMRR
will reject most of this common mode noise.
However, not all of the noise can be rejected,
especially the high frequency noise, and so the
lock-in may overload on the high sensitivity
ranges.
appears on both the A & B inputs will not be
perfectly cancelled: the common mode rejection
ratio (CMRR) specifies the degree of cancellation.
For low frequencies the CMRR of 100 dB indicates
that the common mode signal is canceled to 1 part
5
in 10
, but the CMRR decreases by about 6
dB/octave (20 dB/Decade) starting at 1KHz. Even
with a CMRR of 10
5
, a 10 mV common mode
signal behaves like 100nV differential signal.
There are some additional considerations in
deciding how to operate the lock-in amplifier:
Dynamic Reserve (DR) is the ratio of the largest
noise signal that the lock-in can tolerate before
overload to the full-scale input. Dynamic reser ve
is usually expressed in dB. Thus a DR of 60 dB
means that a noise source 1000 times larger than
a full scale input can be present at the input
without affecting the measurement of the signal. A
higher DR results in a degraded output stability
since most of the gain is DC gain after the phase
sensitive detector. In general, the lowest DR
which does not cause an overload should be used.
Quasi-Differential Connection
The second method of connecting the experiment
to the lock-in is called the 'true-differential' mode.
Here, the lock-in uses the difference between the
center conductors of the A & B inputs as the input
signal. Both of the signal sources are shielded
from spurious pick-up.
True-Differential Connection
With either method, it is important to minimize both
the common mode noise and the common mode
signal. Notice that the signal source is held near
ground potential in both cases. A signal which
The Current Input has a 1 kΩ input impedance
and a current gain of 10
6
Volts/Amp. Currents
from 500 nA down to 100 fA full scale can be
measured. The impedance of the signal source is
the most important factor to consider in deciding
between voltage and current measurements.
For high source impedances, (>1 MΩ), and small
currents use the current input. Its relatively low
impedance greatly reduces the amplitude and
phase errors caused by the cable capacitancesource impedance time constant. The cable
capacitance should still be kept small to minimize
the high frequency noise gain of the current
preamplifier.
For moderate source impedances, or larger
currents, the voltage input is preferred. A small
value resistor may be used to shunt the source.
The lock-in then measures the voltage across this
resistor. Select the resistor value to keep the
source bias voltage small while providing enough
signal for the lock-in to measure.
The Auto-Tracking Bandpass Filter has a Q of 5
and follows the reference frequency. The
passband is therefore 1/5 of the reference
frequency. The bandpass filter can provide an
additional 20 dB of dynamic reserve for noise
signals at frequencies outside the passband. The
filter also improves the harmonic rejection of the
lock-in. The second harmonic is attenuated an
additional 13dB and higher harmonics are
30
attenuated by 6 dB/octave more. You may wish to
use the bandpass filter and select a low dynamic
reserve setting in order to achieve a better output
stability. Since the processor can only set the
bandpass filter's center frequency to within 1% of
the reference frequency, this filter can contribute
up to 5° of phase shift error and up to 5% of
amplitude error when it is used. In addition, the
bandpass filter adds a few nanovolts of noise to
the front end of the instrument when it is in use.
In many servo applications, no output filtering is
needed. In this case, the SR530 may be modified
to reduce the output time constant to about 20 µS.
Contact the factory for details.
Noise measurement is a feature which allows
direct measurement of the noise density of the
signal at the reference frequency. This is a useful
feature to assess at what frequency you should
run your experiment.
Line Notch Filters should be used in most
measurement situations. The filters will reject
about 50 dB of line frequency noise (about a factor
of 300). If your reference frequency is one octave
away, then these filters will introduce a 5° phase
shift error, and a few percent amplitude error.
Their effect on your signal is negligible if your
reference frequency is more than two octaves
away.
The frequency range of the SR530 lock-in
amplifier extends from 0.5Hz to 100KHz. No
additional cards are required for the instrument to
cover its full frequency range. The SR530 can be
used to detect a signal at the reference frequency
or at twice the reference frequency to allow for
convenient measurement of the harm onic of the
signal.
Output Filters can have one pole (6 dB per
octave) or two poles (12 dB/octave). A two-pole
filter provides a signal to noise improvement over
a single-pole filter due to its steeper roll off and
reduced noise bandwidth. Single-pole filters are
preferred when the lock-in is used in a servo
system to avoid oscillation.
Ratio Capability allows the lock-in's output to be
divided by an external voltage input. This feature
is important in servo applications to maintain a
constant loop gain, and in experiments to
normalize a signal to the excitation level.
Computer Interface allows a computer to control
and to record data from the instrument. This is the
single most important feature for extending the
lock-in's capabilities and it's useful lifetime.
Measurements which are imprac t ica l wit hout a
computer become simple when a computer is
used to coordinate various parts of the
experiment.
The Internal Oscillator provides a reference
source for the lock-in. This allows the lock-in's
frequency to be set without an additional signal
generator. It also provides a sine wave to be used
as the signal stimulus in an experiment. The
frequency may be set via the computer interface
as well as manually.
31
SR530 Block Diagram
Several new concepts are used to simplify the
design of SR530 lock-in amplif ier . In additi on to
implementing recent advanc es in linear int egr ate d
circuit technology, the instrument was designed to
take full advantage of its microprocessor controller
to improve performance and to reduce cost.
As an example of the new techniques used in the
SR530, consider the harmonic rejection problem.
Previously, lock-in amplifiers used a PLL with a
square wave output. The Fourier components of
the square wave created a serious problem -- the
lock-in would respond to signal and noise at f, 3f,
5f,.ad infinitum. Quite often, one component of
this picket fence of frequencies would land on
some noise source, giving a spurious result. To
overcome this difficulty designers employed tuned
amplifiers or heterodyning techniques. All of these
'fix-ups' had drawbacks, including phase and
amplitude errors, susceptibility to drift, and cardswapping to change frequencies.
In contrast, the SR530 detects the signal by
mixing a reference sine wave in a precision analog
multiplier. Because of the low harmonic content of
this sine wave, the instrument is insensitive to
harmonics. This approach has eliminated the
difficulty, performance compromises, and cost of
the older techniques.
32
The Signal Channel
The instrument has both current and voltage
inputs. The current input is a virtual ground, and
the 100 MΩ voltage inputs can be used as singleended or true differential inputs.
There are three signal filters. Each of these filters
may be switched 'in' or 'out' by the user. The first
filter is a line notch filter. Set to either 50 or 60 Hz,
this filter provides 50 dB of rejection at the line
frequency. The second filter provides 50 dB of
rejection at the first harmonic of the line frequency.
The third filter is an auto-tracking bandpass filter
with a center frequency tuned by the microprocessor to the frequency of the signal. These
three filters eliminate most of the noise from the
signal input before the signal is amplified.
A high-gain ac amplifier is used to amplify the
signal before entering the phase sensitive
detector. The high gain which is available from
this programmable amplifier allows the lock-in to
operate with a lower gain in its dc amplifier. This
arrangement allows high stability operation even
when used on the most sensitive ranges.
Reference Channel
The processor controlled reference input
discriminator can lock the instrument's PLL to a
variety of reference signals. The PLL can lock to
sine waves or to logic pulses with virtually no
phase error. The PLL outputs are phase shifted
and shaped to provide two precision sine waves.
The two sine waves have 90° of phase shift
between them.
Phase Sensitive Detectors
and dc amplifiers will affect the stability and
dynamic reserve of the instrument. The output is
most stable when most of the gain is in the ac
amplifier, however, high ac gain reduces the
dynamic reserve.
For the most demanding applications, the user
may specify how the system gain is partitioned.
However, with prefilters that are able to provide up
to 100 dB of dynamic reserve, and with chopper
stabilized dc amplifiers, most users will not be
concerned with just how the system gain is
allocated.
A Microprocessor Based Design
The instrument was designed to take full
advantage of its microprocessor controller. This
approach provides several key advantages...
The instrument may be interfaced to a laboratory
computer over the RS232 and IEEE-488
interfaces. In addition to simply reading data from
the lock-in, the computer can control all of the
instrument settings with simple ASCII commands.
A key feature of the instrument is its four A/D
inputs and two D/A outputs. These analog I/O
ports may be used to read and supply analog
voltages to an experiment or measurement. All of
the input and output ports have a full-scale range
of ±10.24VDC with 2.5 mV resolution and 0.05%
accuracy.
Computer control can eliminate set-up errors,
reduce tedium, allow more complete data
recording and post measurement analysis. Also,
the computer can play an active role in the data
acquisition by adjusting gains, etc., in response to
changing measurement con dit ions .
The Phase Sensitive Detectors are linear
multipliers which mix the amplified and filtered
signal with the reference sine waves. The
difference frequency component of the multipliers'
outputs are dc signals that are proportional to the
amplitude of the signal. The low-pass filters which
follow each multiplier can reject any frequency
components which are more than a fraction of a
Hertz away from the signal frequency.
DC Amplifiers and System Gain
Dc amplifiers amplify and offset the outputs of the
two low pass filters. The total syst em gain is the
product of the ac and dc amplifier gains. The
partitioning of the system gain between these ac
The microprocessor based design eliminates
many analog components to improve
performance, reliability, and reduce cost. For
example, the magnitude and phase outputs are
calculated by the microprocessor instead of using
an analog vector summer. This eliminates the
temperature drifts and inaccur ac ies ass ociat ed
with nonlinear analog circuits and greatly reduces
the number of parts. Each unit is computer
calibrated at the factory, and calibration constants
are placed in the instrument's read-only memory.
The SR530 has only one-fifth of the analog
trimming components that are found in older
designs.
33
Circuit Description
Introduction
The SR530 Lock-in amplifier is an integrated
instrument combining state of the art analog design
with advanced microprocessor based control and
interfaces. This discussion is intended to aid the
advanced user in gaining a better understanding of
the instrument.
The SR530 has eight main circuit areas: the signal
amplifier, the reference osc il lator, the de mod ula tor ,
the analog output and controls, the front panel, the
microprocessor, the computer interfaces, and the
power supplies. With the exception of the front
panel, the quadrature oscillator and de mod ula tor ,
and a few pieces of hardware, the entire lock-in is
built on a single printed circuit board. Each section
is isolated from the others as much as possible to
prevent spurious signal pickup. To aid in the
location of individual components, the first digit (or
first two digits of a four digit part number) of each
part number generally refers to the schematic sheet
number on which it occurs. To help find the part on
the circuit board, the parts list includes a location on
the circuit board for each component. Parts with a
four-digit part number beginning with 10,11, or 12
are found on the quadrature detector plug-in board
located in the center of the main circuit board. Part
numbers beginning with 6 refer to parts on the front
panel.
Signal Amplifier
Assuming the input selector switch is set to a voltage
input, the signal is coupled in through capacitors
C101 and C102. The input impedance is set by the
100 MΩ resistors R101 and R102 over the operating
frequency range. Note that R103 isolates the signal
shields from the instrument ground forcing the return
signal current back along the cable shields. The
signal is then applied differentially to the gates of
Q101. Q101 is a low noise dual JFET. The drain
current through R109 is kept constant by 2/2 U101.
The other half of U101 maintains a virtual null
between the drains of the two transistors and thus
an identical current flows through R110. Any input
that would cause a differential between the two
drains is amplified by 1/2 U101 and fed back via
R112 in such a way as to reduce that differential.
Since the two transistors are at equal and constant
currents, their gate-source potentials are constant.
Thus, the fed back signal which appears at the
source of the right hand transistor exactly matches
the input . Likewise, this signal will match the input
to the left hand transistor but with the opposite
sign. Resistors R112 and R110 attenuate the
fed back signal from the output of U101 resulting
in a differential input, single ended output, fixed
gain of 10 amplifier. P101 adjusts the current
balance between the two transistors and
therefore their gain match and common mode
rejection.
The output of the pre-amp is scaled by resistors
R119-R122 and analog switch U103 which
make up a 1-2-5-10 attenuator. The signal is
then amplified by 2/2 U102. Input overload is
sensed through diodes D101-D104.
Current Amplifier
When the input selector is set to current, the
input to the pre-amp comes from the output of
the current to voltage converter, 1/2 U102.
U102 is a low voltage-noise bipolar op amp.
Q102 serves as an input buffer to provide low
current-noise to the input. The op amp always
maintains a null at the gates of Q102 thus
providing an input impedance of 1KΩ (R128).
The input current is converted to a voltage by
R135 and the op amp. Q103 bootstraps out the
summing junction capacitanc e of Q102.
Notch Filters
U107 is a high Q, line frequency, notch filter
which can be switched in and out by analog
switch 1/4 U106. The frequency and depth of
the filter can be adjusted with P102 and P103.
Resistors R146-R149 and switch U108 make up
a selectable attenuator. U118 is a line
frequency 2nd harmonic notch filter selected by
2/4 U106. P104 and P105 adjust the frequency
and depth. The second notch filter has a gain of
3 and its output is scaled by U110 and resistors
R156-R159. The signal then takes two paths; to
inverting amplifier U111 and to the input of the
tracking bandpass filter. U111 has the same
gain as the bandpass filter. The output of either
U111 or the bandpass filter is selected by 3/4
U112 and 4/4 U106 and amplified by U113.
U114 and U115 provide a last stage of gain and
scaling and the final output is ac coupled and
buffered by 4/4 U208.
Bandpass Filter
The bandpass filter is a three op amp statevariable active filter. 3/4 of U201 make up the
three op amps of the standard filter. U203,
34
U204, and U205 are analog switches which select
the feedback capacitors for the 5 decades of
operation. The two halves of U202 are matched
transconductance amplifiers operating as
programmable, voltage controlled, current sources
which take the place of the normal, frequency
setting, resistors. A voltage proportional to the
reference frequency is converted into a current by
1/4 U208 and Q201. This current programs the
effective "resistance" of the two transconductance
amplifiers and thus, tunes the center frequency of
the filter to follow the reference. The output of the
filter is buffered by 4/4 U201. The two remaining op
amps in U208 are used to detect signal overloads
throughout the amplifier chain.
Reference Oscillator
The reference input signal is ac coupled and
buffered by U301. R378 isolates the reference
shield from the lock-in ground to prevent ground loop
currents. 1/2 U303 switches the polarity of the
reference reaching comparator U304. U305 is a
retriggerable one-shot whose out put ind ic ates a no
reference condition if no comparator pulses are
generated for three seconds.
U309 is a dual transconductance amplifier in a
triangle VCO configuration. U310 selects the
integrating capacitor depending on the frequency
range. The VCO frequency is determined by the
programming current through R318 and therefore by
the output voltage of U308. C306 is the phaselocked loop low pass filter which is buffered by
U308. U307 is a programmable current source used
to charge and discharge C306. The amount of
current available to U307 is determined by the VCO
control voltage, thus, the tracking rate of the VCO is
proportional to the VCO frequency. The triangle
output is compared to a constant voltage by U314.
1/2 U313 and 1/2 U312 select f or 2f operation. This
signal is fed back to the phase detector U306 to be
compared with the reference output of U304. U315
compares the triangle output with a variable voltage
to generate a square-wave signal phase-shifted from
the reference. The range of this fine phase shift
control is -5 to 95 degrees.
The output of U315 serves as the reference to a
second phase-locked loop. This second PLL uses a
similar proportional tracking triangle VCO.
Comparator U329 looks at the square wave output
of the VCO while comparator U328 detects the zero
crossings of the triangle output. 1/2 U327 selects
one these comparators to feed back to the phase
detector, U316. Since the square and triangle
outputs are in quadrature, U327 selects either an in-
phase or quadrature relationship between the
two VCO's. Thus, the output of the second VCO
can be shifted from -5 to 185 deg from the
reference.
The triangle output is divided by R363 and R362
before reaching transconductance amplifier 2/2
U322. The amplitude of the triangle input to this
amplifier is enough to just saturate the input and
provide a sine wave output. 2/2 U325 then
amplifies the sine wave before it goes to the
demodulator. U324 is a comparator which
generates a square wave in-phase with the sine
output. U326 divides the frequency of the
square wave by eight and 2/2 U327 selects the
frequency of the square wave chopper.
The square wave output of U322 serves as the
reference to the quadrature oscillator PLL. This
PLL is identical to the triangle oscillator, sine
wave shaper described above. U1004 detects
the zero-crossings of the triangle wave to feed
back to the phase comparator, U1002. This
ensures that the quadrature triangle wave is 90
deg out of phase from the first sine wave. The
quadrature triangle is shaped into a sine wave
by 2/2 U1009 and amplified by 2/2 U1014.
U1012 is a comparator which generates a
square wave in-phase with the quadrature sine
wave. U1013 divides the frequency of the
square wave by eight and 1/2 U1011 selects the
frequency of the square wave chopper.
Demodulator and Low Pass
Amplifier
Amplifier U402 and switch U401 select the
polarity of the reference sine wave. This allows
phase shifts up to 360 degrees from the
reference input. The sine wave is ac coupled by
U403 and inverted by U404. U405 selects
alternating polarities of the sine wave at the
chopper frequency, f/2 or f/16. This chopped
sine wave is then multiplied by the output of the
signal amplifiers by the analog multiplier U406.
The synchronous output of the multiplier that
corresponds to the in-phase signal is a square
wave at the chopper frequency. The output is
ac coupled by U407 to remove the dc offset of
the multiplier. U408 inverts the signal and U405
chops the square wave to recover a dc output.
U409 buffers the chopper output before the first
low pass time constant. Op amps U416 and 2/2
U402 make up the first low pass amplifier with
relays U411-U415 and U417 selecting the time
constant. The second low pass amplifier is
35
U419. Analog switch U418 selects the time constant
and gain. The full scale output of U418 is 5 volts.
The quadrature demodulator and low pass amplifiers
are identical to that described above. The
quadrature detector output is provi ded by U1119.
Analog Output and Control
The dc output of the demodulator/low pass
amplifiers is passed to the reference input of
multiplying DAC U502. The DAC is programmed
with the appropriate attenuation to calibrate the
overall gain of the lock-in. Every gain setting in each
dynamic reserve is calibrated independently and the
proper attenuations are stored in the unit's ROM.
used to program the band pass filter and the
reference oscillator phase sh ift. One output is
subtracted from the lock-in output in U508 to
provide a variable offset and another is the rms
noise output. The remaining two outputs
generate the magnitude and phase output
voltages.
Expand
3/4 U511 and 4/4 U1202 are the expand
amplifiers. They provide a selectable gain of 10
to the channel 1 and 2 outputs just before the
output buffers.
Front Panel
The quadrature output is calibrated by DAC U1201.
Amplifiers U1204 and U1205 buffer the two
demodulator outputs to drive the X and Y BNC's.
A/D's
Analog multiplexer U504 selects the signal to be
digitized by the microprocessor. This signal can be
either the lock-in's in-phase or quadrature output or
one of the four independent analog inputs buffered
by U501. These general purpose inputs are located
on the rear panel of the instrument. The selected
signal is sampled and held on capacitor C502 and
buffered by 4/4 U508. The A/D conversion is done
by successive approximation using comparator
U514 to compare the sampled and held signal with
known outputs of U505, a 12 bit DAC with a
precision reference. Note that the output of U506,
an 8 bit DAC is summed with the output of U505.
This 8 bit DAC corrects for offset errors which can
accumulate as analog voltages pass through
buffers, S/H amps, and comparators. These offsets
are measured after each unit is manufactured, and
values to compensate for these offsets are placed in
the unit's ROM. The polarity of the offset-corrected
12 bit DAC is set by 2/4 U511 and the SIGN bit
yielding 13 bits of resolution from -10.24 to +10.24
volts.
D/A's
In addition to providing reference voltages for A/D
conversion, the DAC output voltage may be
multiplexed by U507 to one of eight sample and hold
amplifiers which provide analog output and control
voltages. The microprocessor refreshes each S/H
amplifier every few milliseconds to prevent droop.
Two of these outputs are available as general
programmable outputs on the rear panel. Two are
There are 71 led's on the front panel controlled
by 9 serial-in, parallel-out shift registers. 8 of the
shift registers are written to simultaneously and
the 9th is written separately. 8 consecutive write
operations are required to set the LED's in each
case. The liquid crystal displays are managed
by the display controllers, U6101, U6102, and
U6103. Exclusive-or gates U6104, U6105 and
U6106 drive the left over segments. Latches
U6107 and U6108 provide the logic bits for
these extra segments as well as the keyboard
row strobes. U6109 reads the switch closures
as the rows are scanned.
Microprocessor Control
The microprocessor, U701, is a Z80A CPU
clocked at 4 MHz. 16K bytes of firmware are
stored in the ROM, U702. U703 is a 2K byte
static RAM, backed-up by a lithium battery. A
power-down standby circuit, Q701, preserves
the RAM contents when the power is turned off.
The battery has a life of 5-10 years. The CPU
has power-up and power-down resets to prevent
erroneous execution during turn-on or short
sags in the line voltage.
U704 is a 3-channel counter. One channel
generates the baud rate for the RS232 interface
while the other two are used to measure the
frequency or period of the reference oscillator.
U709 provides a gate pulse to counter 0.
Multiplexer U708 selects whether the gate is a
single period of the reference (period
measurement) or a gate of known duration
(frequency measurement). Counter 1 is a
programmable divide by N counter whose output
is either counted for one period of the reference,
36
or, generates the gate pulse during which reference
pulses are counted.
I/O addresses are decoded by U705, U706, and
U707. The microprocessor controls the lock-in
functions through I/O ports U714-U721. U713
generates an interrupt to the CPU every 4 msec to
keep the microprocessor executing in real time.
RS232 Interface
The RS232 interface uses an 8251A UART, U801,
to send and receive bytes in a bit serial fashion. Any
standard baud rate from 300 to 19.2K baud may be
selected with the configuration switches. The X16
transmit and receive clock comes from counter 2 of
U704. The RS232 interface is configured as DCE so
that a terminal may be connected with a standard
cable. When a data byte is received by the UART,
the RxRDY output interrupts the CPU to prevent the
data from being overwritten.
GPIB Interface
The interface to the GPIB is provided by U802, an
MC68488 General Purpose Interf ace Ada pter
(GPIA). The GPIB data and control lines are
buffered by drivers U808 and U811. Because the
GPIA uses a 1 MHz clock, wait states are provided
by U805 to synchronize I/O transactions with the 4
MHz CPU. The GPIA interrupts the CPU whenever
a GPIB transaction occurs which requires the CPU’s
response. (The GPIB address is set by switch bank
SW1.)
Internal Oscillator
The internal oscillator is on a small circuit board
attached to the rear panel of the instrument.
Local regulators, Q1 and Q2, provide power to
the board. The VCO input is internally pul led up
by R12. This pulls the VCO input to 10V when
the VCO input is left open. 2/4 U1 translates the
VCO input voltage to provide a negative control
voltage to U2, the function generator. P3
adjusts the VCO calibration. U2 is a sine wave
generator whose frequency range is selected by
the VCO Range switch and capacitors, C4-C6.
P2 adjusts the sine wave symmetry at low
frequencies. 4/4 U1 buffers the output of U2.
P1 adjusts the amplitude of the output sine
wave. The output amplitude on the SIne Out is
selected by the amplitude switch. The output
impedance is 600 Ω.
Power Supplies
The line transformer provides two outputs, 40VAC
and 15VAC, both center tapped. The transformer
has dual primaries which may be selected by the
voltage selector card in the fuse holder. The 15VAC
is rectified by diode bridge BR2 and passed to 5V
regulator U909. The output of U909 powers the
microprocessor and its related circuitry. The 40VAC
output is half-wave rectified by BR1 and regulated by
U901 and U902 to provide +20V and -20V. These
two dc voltages are then regulated again by 15V
regulators U903-U908. Each 15V regulator powers
a separate section of the lock-in to reduce coherent
pick up between sections. U911 and U912 provide
plus and minus 7.5V and U910 generates +5V for
the analog circuits.
37
Calibration and Repair
This section details calibration of the instrument.
Calibration should be done only by a qualified
electronics technician.
********* WARNING *********
The calibration procedure requires adjusting the
instrument with power applied and so there is a
risk of personal injury or death by electric shock.
Please be careful.
Most of the calibration parameters are
determined by a computer aided calibration
procedure after burn-in at the factory. These
calibration parameters are quite stable and so
will not need to be adjusted. Calibration
parameters which may need field adjustment are
detailed below.
Multiplier Adjustments
On the HIGH dynamic reserve setting, there can
be some reference frequency feedthrough. This
section describes how to null this unwanted
output.
This adjustment requires an oscilloscope and a
signal generator which can provide a 500Hz
reference signal.
Allow the unit to warm up for about 1 hour.
Reset the unit by turning it off and back on while
holding the LOCAL key down.
Select voltage input A and connect a 50 1/2
terminator or shorting plug to the A input BNC
connector. Connect the 500 Hz reference signal
to the reference input. Set the SENSITIVITY to
1mV and the DYN RES to HIGH. The PRE
TIME CONSTANT should be set to 1mS and
the POST TIME CONSTANT to NONE.
Connect the scope to the CHANNEL 1 OUTPUT
on the front panel. Set the scope to 2V/div and
5mS/div. Externally trigger the scope using the
reference input signal.
After about 90 seconds, the scope display
should show a 500 Hz sine wave on a 30 Hz
(500/16 Hz) square wave. Remove the four
screws holding the top panel on. Slide the top
panel back about half way. Using a small
screwdriver, adjust P402 at location D2 to
minimize the 500 Hz output. Adjust P403 at location
C2 to minimize the 30 Hz output.
Now set the both time constants to 1S. Adjust P404
at location F4 to zero the output. This adjustment
has a range of 20% of full scale on the HIGH
dynamic reserve setting. (2% on NORM and 0.2%
on LOW). This zeroes the DC output of Channel 1
on all dynamic reserve ranges.
Now connect the scope to the CHANNEL 2 OUTPUT. Set the PRE TIME CONSTANT to 1mS
and the POST TIME CONSTANT to NONE. Adjust
P1102 to minimize the 500 Hz output. Adjust P1103
to minimize the 30 Hz output. Set both time
constants to 1S. Adjust P1104 to zero the output.
All three potentiometers are located on the plug-in
board in the center of the main circuit board.
Replace the top panel.
Amplifier and Filter Adjustments
This section describes how to adjust the Common
Mode Rejection and Line notch filter frequencies.
An oscilloscope and a signal generator which can
provide an accurate line frequency and twice line
frequency sine wave are required.
Allow the unit to warm up for about 1 hour.
Reset the unit by turning it off and back on while
holding the LOCAL key down.
Remove the four screws holding down the top panel.
Slide the panel back about halfway.
CMRR
Set the reference frequency to 100 Hz. It is
convenient to use the SYNC output of the signal
generator as the reference input if it is available.
Connect the sine output of the signal generator to
the A input and set the input selector to A. With the
SENSITIVITY at 100mV, adjust the amplitude of the
input signal to 100 mV (full scale).
Now set the input selector to A-B and connect the
signal to both the A and B inputs. Set the
SENSITIVITY to 20µV, the DYN RES to NORM and
the BANDPASS filter IN. Connect the scope to the
SIGNAL MONITOR output on the rear panel. Set
the scope to AC coupled, 0.2V/div, and 10mS/div.
Externally trigger the scope using the reference input
signal.
38
The CMRR is adjusted by the single turn
potentiometer located at A1 under the single
hole at the front of the signal shield. (The shield
is the aluminum box on the left side of the main
board). Using a small screwdriver, carefully
adjust the potentiometer to minimize the 100 Hz
output on the scope. Set the DISPLAY to R,Ø
and the sensitivity to 5µV and minimize the R
output on the Channel 1 meter.
Notch Filters
Set the reference frequency to 60.0 Hz (50.0
Hz). It is convenient to use the SYNC output of
the signal generator as the reference input if it is
available. Connect the sine output of the signal
generator to the A input and set the input
selector to A. With the SENSITIVITY at 100mV,
adjust the amplitude of the input signal to 100
mV (full scale).
Set the LINE NOTCH to IN, the SENSITIVITY to
10mV, and the DYN RES to LOW. Connect the
scope to the SIGNAL MONITOR output on the
rear panel. Set the scope to AC coupled,
0.2V/div, 10mS/div. Trigger the scope externally
using the reference input signal.
The LINE NOTCH frequency and depth are
adjusted by the pair of 20 turn potentiometers
located under the middle two holes in the signal
shield (row 4 on the circuit board). Using a
small screwdriver, carefully adjust one pot until
the line output on the scope is minimized. Then
adjust the other pot until the output is minimized.
Iterate between the two pots until there is no
further improvement. Set the SENSITIVITY to 5mV, 2mV, and 1mV, repeating the adjustments
at each sensitivity.
Repeat this procedure using a reference
frequency of 120.0 Hz (100.0 Hz) and the
LINEX2 NOTCH filter. The LINEX2 NOTCH is
adjusted by the pair of 20 turn potentiometers
located under the back two holes in the signal
shield (row 5 on the circuit board).
Replace the top panel.
Replacing the Front-End Transistors
Both the voltage and current front end transistors
(Q101 and Q102) are 2N6485 (IMF6485) dual
JFETS. These transistors are selected at the factory
to meet the noise specifications.
This section outlines their replacement procedure in
the event that they become damaged during use.
1) Remove the AC power cord from the unit.
2) Remove top and bottom panels.
3) Release the signal shields by removing the four
screws which hold it onto the circuit board. Be
careful not to lose the nuts. Carefully slide the
shields back and then lift them out.
4) The input transistors are located on the main
board, just behind the input selector switch.
Q101 is the voltage (A, A-B) front end, and
Q102 is the current (I) front end. Desolder and
replace the appropriate transistor.
5) Replace the signal shields. Be careful to check
that the shields do not touch any circuit board
traces around their edges.
6) Replace the top and bottom panels.
7) If Q101, the voltage front end has just been
replaced, the Common Mode Rejection needs to
be readjusted using the procedure described in
the Amplifier Adjustments section.
39
Appendix A:
Noise Sources and Cures
And Others. Other noise sources include flicker
noise found in vacuum tubes, and generati on and
recombination noise found in semiconductors.
Noise, random and uncorrelated fluc tuat ions of
electronic signals, finds its way into experiments
in a variety of ways. Good laboratory practice
can reduce noise sources to a manageable
level, and the lock-in technique can be used to
recover signals which may still be buried in
noise.
Intrinsic Noise Sources
Johnson Noise. Arising from fluctuations of
electron density in a resistor at finite
temperature, these fluctuations give rise to a
mean square noise voltage,
_
V2 = ∫4kT Re[Z(f)] df = 4kTR ∆f
where k=Boltzman's constant, 1.38x10-23J/°K; T
is the absolute temperature in Kelvin; the real
part of the impedance, Re[z(f)] is the resistance
R; and we are looking at the noise source with a
detector, or ac voltmeter, with a bandwidth of ∆f
in Hz. For a 1MΩ resistor,
_
1/2
(V2)
= 0.13 µV/√Hz
All of these noise sources are incoherent. Thus, the
total noise is the square root of the sum of the
squares of all the incoherent noise sources.
Non-Essential Noise Sources
In addition to the "intrinsic" noise sources listed
above there are a variety of "non-essential" noise
sources, i.e. those noise sources which can be
minimized with good laboratory practice. It is
worthwhile to look at what might be a typical noise
spectrum encountered in the laboratory
environment:
To obtain the rms noise voltage that you would
see across this 1M½ resistor, we multiply
0.13µV/√Hz by the square root of the detector
bandwidth. If, for example, we were looking at
all frequencies between dc and 1 MHz, we
would expect to see an rms Johnson noise of
_
1/2
(V2)
'1/f Noise'. Arising from resistance fluctuations
in a current carrying resistor, the mean squared
noise voltage due to '1/f' noise is given by
where A is a dimensionless constant, 10
carbon, R is the resistance, I the current, ∆f the
bandwidth of our detector, and f is the frequency
to which the detector is tuned. For a carbon
resistor carrying 10 mA with R = 1k, ∆f = f = 1Hz,
we have
= 0.13 µV/√Hz*(106 Hz)
_
V2 = A R2 I2 ∆f/f
V
noise
= 3 µVrms
1/2
= 130 µV
-11
for
Noise Spectrum
Some of the non-essential noise sources appear in
this spectrum as spikes on the intrinsic background.
There are several ways which these noise sources
work their way into an experiment.
40
Capacitive Coupling. A voltage on a nearby
piece of apparatus (or operator) can couple to a
detector via a stray capacitance. Although
C
may be very small, the coupled in noise
stray
may still be larger than a weak experimental
signal.
Inductive Coupling. Here noise couples to the
experiment via a magnetic field:
Inductive Noise Coupling
Capacitive Noise Coupling
To estimate the noise current through C
stray
into
the detector we have
i=C
stray
dV = jwC
strayVnoise
dt
where a reasonable approximation to C
stray
can
be made by treating it as parallel plate capacitor.
Here, w is the radian frequency of the noise
source (perhaps 2 * π * 60Hz ), V
noise
is the
noise voltage source amplitude (perhaps 120
VAC). For an area of A = (.01 m)2 and a
distance of d = 0.1m, the 'capacitor' will have a
value of 0.009 pF and the resulting noise current
will be 400pA. This meager current is about
4000 times larger than the most sensitive
current scale that is available on the SR510
lock-in.
Cures for capacitive coupling of noise signals
include:
A changing current in a nearby circuit gives rise to a
changing magnetic field which induces an emf in the
loop connecting the detector to the experiment.
(emf = dØ
/dt.) This is like a transformer, with the
B
experiment-detector loop as the secondary winding.)
Cures for inductively coupled noise include:
1) removing or turning off the interfering noise
source (difficult to do if the noise is a broadcast
station),
2) reduce the area of the pick-up loop by using
twisted pairs or coaxial cables, or even twisting the 2
coaxial cables used in differential hook-ups,
3) using magnetic shielding to prevent the magnetic
field from inducing an emf (at high frequencies a
simple metal enclosure is adequate),
4) measuring currents, not voltages, from high
impedance experiments.
1) removing or turning off the interfering noise
source,
2) measuring voltages with low impedance
sources and measuring currents with high
impedance sources to reduce the effect of i
stray
3) installing capacitive shielding by placing both
the experiment and the detector in a metal box.
,
41
Resistive Coupling (or 'Ground Loops').
Currents through common connections can give
rise to noise voltages.
Microphonics provides a path for mechanical noise
to appear as electrical noise in a circuit or
experiment. Consider the simple circuit below:
The capacitance of a coaxial cable is a function of its
geometry so mechanical vibrations will cause the
cable capacitance to vary with time. Since C=Q/V,
we have
Resistive Coupling
Here, the detector is measuring the voltage
across the experiment, plus the voltage due to
the noise current passing through the finite
resistance of the ground bus. This problem
arises because we have used two different
grounding points which are not at exactly the
same potential. Some cures for ground loop
problems include:
1) grounding everything to the same physical
point,
2) using a heavier ground bus to reduce the
potential drop along the ground bus,
3) removing sources of large currents from
ground wires used for small signals.
C dV + V dC
dt dt dt
so mechanical vibrations will cause a dC/dt which in
turn gives rise to a current i, which will affect the
detector. Ways to eliminate microphonic signals
include:
1) eliminate mechanical vibrations,
2) tie down experimental cables so they will not
sway to and fro,
3) use a low noise cable that is designed to reduce
microphonic effects.
Thermocouple Effect. The emf created by dissimilar
metal junctions can give rise to many microvolts of
dc potential, and can be a source of ac noise if the
temperature of the junction is not held constant.
This effect is large on the scale of many low level
measurements.
= dQ = i
42
Appendix B:
Introduction to the RS232
The 'RS232' is a standard for bit serial
asynchronous data communication. The
standard defines the format for data
transmission, the electrical specifications for the
signal levels, and the mechanical dimensions of
connectors.
Despite the definition of a standard, there are so
many permutations of control lines, data
formats, and transmission speeds, that gett in g
two RS232 devices to communicate usually
requires some work.
In this section, we will provide some basic
information to aid you in connecting your RS232
device to the SR530 Computer Interface.
CASE 1 - The Simplest Configuration.
data, must also be connected correctly at the
terminal end. If the terminal responds to a control
line, it will believe that the SR530 is not ready to
accept data (because the line is not passed in this
example) and will therefore not send any data.
CASE 2 - RS232 with Control Lines.
The data lines are the same as in Case 1. In
addition to the data lines, there are two control lines
used:
CTS - Pin 5
"Clear to send" is a signal asserted by the DCE to
tell the DTE that the DCE is ready to receive data.
DTR - Pin 20
"Data Terminal Ready" is a signal asserted by the
DTE to tell the DCE that the DTE is ready to receive
data.
In this case, one wire is used to send data from
device A to device B and another wire is used to
send data from device B to device A. Notice
that pin 2 is an output on device A and an input
on device B. (It is good practice to run the
ground, pin 7, between the devices as well).
The RS232 defines two types of devices; DTE
(Data Terminal Equipment) and DCE (Data
Communications Equipment.) An RS232 por t
on a computer may be either a DTE or DCE but
nearly every terminal with an RS232 port is a
DTE. RS232 ports on a computer which are
intended to connect to a modem, such as the
COM1: port on the IBM PC, are DTE. The
SR530 is configured as DCE, and so it may be
directly connected to ASCII terminals and to the
COM: ports on IBM PC's and compatibles.
As an example, consider connecting an RS232
ASCII computer terminal to the SR530 using a 2
wire link. The terminal is a DTE and the SR530
is a DCE. To operate correctly, the SR530 and
the terminal must have the same settings for
baud rate, parity, and number of stop bits. The
control lines in the RS232 Standard, which are
used to indicate that a device is ready to accept
The SR530 responds to the control lines as follows:
1) If the lines are not connected, the SR530
assumes that you are ready to receive data.
2) Data will not be transmitted from the SR530 if the
DTR line (pin 20) is low. This is useful in the case
when your program is not yet ready to receive data.
If data transmission is not suspended, then data
may be overwritten in your computer's UART (as it is
not being retrieved by the program and so will be
lost.) When this happens, the 'over-run' flag will be
set in your computer's UART and it may be
recognized by the operating system, generating an
error message such as "I/O Device Error" (See the
"W" command in the SR530 Command List for
another way to slow data transmission.)
Baud Rate
The RS232 baud rate of the SR530 is switch
selectable from 300 to 19.2K baud (see
configuration switch setting in the front of this
manual.) 19.2K baud means that data is transmitted
at 19,200 bits/second. With one start bit, 2 stop bits,
8 data bits, and no parity bits, each ASCII character
requires 573 µsec to be transmitted (11bits/19.2K
43
baud.) The typical data string 5.1270<cr>
characters, requiring 4 msec to be sent.
has 7
Stop Bits
Generally, selection of 2 stop bits will result in
fewer data transmission errors.
Parity
The Parity bit provides a check against faulty
data transfer. It is not commonly used in local
data transmission environments. If the parity
option is selected, the SR530 will transmit 8 data
bits and a parity bit, however, no parity check of
incoming data is done.
Voltage Levels
The RS232 uses bipolar voltage levels:
The control lines use positive logic. For
example, the DCE tells the DTE that it is clear to
send (CTS) by placing > +3 VDC on pin 5 of the
interface. Similarly, the DTE can tell the DCE
that it is not ready by placing -3 VDC on pin 20
(DTR) of the interface.
The data lines, pins 2 and 3, use negative logic.
A 'zero' bit is represented by a positive voltage
and a 'one' bit is represented by a negative
voltage. A start bit is a positive voltage and a
stop bit is a negative voltage. Data is
transmitted with the least significant bit first. The
letter 'A', which has the ASCII code 41H (0100
0001), would appear as follows:
If a parity option was selected, the parity bit would
be sent after the 8th data bit, but before the first stop
bit.
Final Tip
When you are trying to get the RS232 to work with
your computer, it is helpful to be able to 'eavesdrop'
on the RS232 data lines going between the SR530
and the computer. This can be done with an ASCII
RS232 terminal and the following connector:
To test the connector, place the hook clip on pin 2 of
the same connector (shorting pin 2 to pin 3.) Now,
when you type at the terminal keyboard, data
transmitted from pin 2 is received at pin 3 and
displayed on the terminal screen. To use as a
debugging tool, attach the hook clip to either pin 2 or
pin 3 of the RS232 cable on the SR530 to show
either data sent from the Computer or the SR530.
The baud rate, parity, and stop bits of the terminal
must match those of the SR530 and the computer.
If your terminal has a mode which will display control
characters (such as carriage returns and line feeds)
it is helpful to operate in that mode.
A variant of the 'eavesdropping' approach is
diagrammed below:
With this cable arrangement, the ASCII terminal can
listen to the data passing in both directions. The
only drawback is that the terminal will display
garbled data if both devices transmit data at the
same time.
44
Appendix C:
Introduction to the GPIB
Data Bus: There are eight data lines which use
negative logic and pass the bits of each byte in
parallel.
The IEEE-488 Standard specifies the voltage
levels, handshake requirements, timing,
hardware details, pinout and connector
dimensions for a 16 line, bit parallel bus . Many
instruments may be connected in series to
communicate over the same cable. Because
the bits are passed in parallel, the GPIB is faster
than the RS232.
The controller (generally your computer)
coordinates data transfer on the bus by
designating all participating instruments
(including itself) as either a talker or a listener.
Listeners can receive data placed on the bus by
the Talker. Devices can have the capacity to
operate in either mode. The address of each
device is set by switches in the device and must
be between 0 and 30.
Bus Description
Byte Transfer Control Group. This consists of
3 negative logic lines that implement the GPIB
handshaking. The NRFD (Not Ready For Data)
line is held low by any designated listener who is
not ready to accept data. When every listener is
ready, the line goes high and the talker may
release data to the bus. After data is on the bus,
the talker pulls the DAV (Data Valid) line down.
At this point, each listener retrieves the data.
Before and during the retrieval of the data, the
listener holds the NDAC (No Data Accepted) line
down. When every listener has received the
data, the NDAC line goes high, allowing the
talker to release the DAV line high. Finally, the
listener pulls down the NDAC line until another
transfer is initiated.
General Interface Lines: These five lines operate
independently of the handshake lines and use
negative logic.
1) The EOI (End or Identify) line is used by the talker
to designate the end of message.
2) The SRQ (Service Request) line is used by any
device to ask for service. The controller can serial
poll each device (each device returns an 8 bit status
byte) to determine who needs attention. It can also
do a parallel poll using the EOI and ATN lines where
each device is assigned a single data line.
3) The ATN (Attention) line makes both talkers and
listeners accept information and passes control of
the DAV line to the controller. This line is used by
the controller to identify talkers and listeners through
their addresses.
4) The REN (Remote Enable) line changes the
status of an instrument from local to remote.
5) The IFC (Interface Clear) line clears the bus of all
data and activity.
Though GPIB is a very powerful interface, strict
protocol must be observed for it to operate
successfully.
45
Appendix D:
Program Examples
All of the program examples which follow do the
same thing, only the computer, language, or
interface is changed. The programs read the
Channel 1 and 2 Outputs and write the results to
the computer screen. In addition, the X6 analog
output port is ramped from 0 to 10V.
Program Example 1:
IBM PC, Basic, via RS232
In this example, the IBM PC's ASYNC port (known
as COM1: or AUX: to DOS users) will be used to
communicate with the SR530. Only two wires
between the IBM PC's ASYNC port and the
SR530 are needed (pins #2 & #3 of the RS232),
but pins 5,6,8 and 20 should be connected
together on the connector at the IBM end.
10 ′EXAMPLE PROGRAM TO READ THE SR510 OUTPUT AND RAMP THE X6 ANALOG OUTPUT
20 ′USING IBM PC BASICA AND THE COM1: RS232 PORT.
30 ′THE RAMP ON X6 CAN BE WATCHED BY SETTING THE SR530 DISPLAY TO A/D.
40 ′
50 ′
60 ′ON THE REAR PANEL OF THE SR530, SET SWITCH #1 OF SW2 DOWN
70 ′AND ALL OTHER SWITCHES IN SW2 UP. (9600 BAUD, NO PARITY)
80 ′
90 OPEN ″COM1:9600,N,8,2,CS,DS,CD″ AS #1
100 ′ SET UP COM1: PORT TO 9600 BAUD, NO PARITY, 8 DATA BITS, 2 STOP BITS,
110 ′IGNORE CTS (CLEAR TO SEND), DSR (DATA SET READY),
120 ′AND CD (CARRIER DETECT).
130 ′
140 PRINT #1, ″ ″ ‘CLEAR UART BY SENDING SPACES
150 PRINT #1, ″Z″′RESET SR530
160 FOR I = 1 TO 200: NEXT I′WAIT FOR RESET TO FINISH
170 ′
180 X = 0′INIT X6 OUTPUT TO ZERO
190 ′
200 PRINT #1, ″Q1″′READ OUTPUT
210 INPUT #1,V1′INTO V1
220 PRINT #1, ″Q2″′READ OUTPUT
230 INPUT #1,V2′INTO V2
240 ′
250 PRINT ″CH1 = ″;V1;″CH2 = ″;V2
260 ′
270 X =X + .0025′INCREMENT X6 OUTPUT BY 2.5 MV
280 IF X > 10 THEN X = 0′RESET X6 RAMP
290 PRINT #1, USING ″X6, ##.###″;X′SET X6 OUTPUT VOLTAGE
300 ′
310 GOTO 200′LOOP FOREVER
46
Program Example 2:
IBM PC, Microsoft Fortran
v3.3, via RS232
Machine language routines to interface to the
COM1: RS232 port are provided in the file
RS232.OBJ found on the SR575 disk. These
routines allow for simple interfacing to the SR530
at 19.2 kbaud from FORTRAN programs.
$storage:2
$include: ′for232.inc′
[for 232.inc must be included to call subroutines in RS232.OBJ
[link with RS232.OBJ (on SR565 disk)
[RS232.OBJ defines:
[init
[initializes COM1: to 19.2 kbaud
[txstr (str) str is a string terminated with ′$′
[transmits str to COM1:
[rxstr (str) str must be declared with length of 15 or greater
[fills str with string received from COM1:
[if and error occurs, nocom is called.
[Nocom should be a FORTRAN subroutine in your program.
To use these routines, the file 'for232.inc' (also on
the SR575 disk) must be 'included' in the
FORTRAN source.
Only two wires between the IBM PC's ASYNC
port and the SR530 are needed (pins #2 & #3 of
the RS232), but pins 5,6,8 and 20 should be
connected together on the connector at the IBM
end.
program ex2
character *20 str1,str2, str3
[Example program to read the SR530 outputs and ramp the
[X6 analog output using Microsoft FORTRAN v3.3 and the
[COM1: port. Set all switches in SW2 to UP on SR530
[for 19.2 kbaud.
[The ramp on X6 can be watched by setting the SR530
[display to D/A/
[in case of a timeout error, this routine runs
[put your error handler here.
[write(*,*) char (7)
write(*,*)′RS232 Timeout Error! ′
stop
end
48
Program Example 3:
IBM PC, Microsoft C v3.0,
via RS232
Machine language routines to interface to the
COM1: RS232 port are provided in the file
RS232.OBJ found on the SR575 disk. These
routines allow for simple interfacing to the SR530
at 19.2 kbaud from C programs.
#include <stdio.h>
/*Compile with >MSC program name/AL;
link with RS232.OBJ (on SR565 disk)
RS232.OBJ defines:
init ()
Initializes COM1: to 19.2 kbaud
txstr (str);
Char *str;str must terminate with ′$′ char
Sends string str to COM1:
rxstr (str);str must be declared with 15 characters
or more length.
Fills str with string received from COM1:
To use these routines, the large model must be
used. Compile with the /AL switch and link with
RS232.OBJ.
Only two wires between the IBM PC's ASYNC port
and the SR530 are needed (pins #2 & #3 of the
RS232), but pins 5,6,8 and 20 should be
connected together on the connector at the IBM
end.
*/
main ()
If an error occurs, your procedure nocom() is called.
Nocom() must be a C procedure in your program.
Example program to read the SR510 outputs and ramp the x6 analog
Output using Microsoft C v3.0 (large model) and the COM1: port.
Set all switches in SW2 to UP on SR530 for 19.2 kbaud.
The ramp on x6 can be watched by setting the SR530 display to D/A.
Program Example 4:
IBM PC,Microsoft Basic,
via GPIB
This program requires the Capital Equipment
Corporation GPIB card for the IBM PC or XT. It
has firmware in ROM to interface high level
languages to the GPIB.
Subroutine calls in Microsoft BASIC are done to
memory locations specified by the name of the
subroutine. The address is relative to the segment
address specified by the DEF SEG statement
preceding CALL.
10 ′EXAMPLE PROGRAM TO READ THE SR530 OUTPUT AND RAMP THE X6 ANALOG OUTPUT
20 ′USING IBM PC BASICA AND THE CAPITAL EQUIPMENT CORP. GPIB INTERFACE CARD
30 ′
40 ′THE RAMP ON X6 CAN BE MATCHED BY SETTING THE SR530 DISPLAY TO D/A.
50 ′
60 ′ON THE SR530 REAR PANEL, SET SWITCHES #4 AND #6 ON SW1 TO DOWN (DEVICE
70 ′ADDRESS = 23, RS232 ECHO ON) AND SWITCH # 1 ON SW2 TO DOWN (RS232 BAUD
80 ′RATE = 9600). ALL OTHER SWITCHES SHOULD BE UP.
90 ′NOTE THAT THE RS232 ECHO IS FOR DEBUGGING AND DEMOSTRATION PURPOSES,
100 ′ UNDER NORMAL CONDITIONING, SWITCH # 6 OF SW1 SHOULD BE UP SINCE THE RS232
110 ′ ECHO SLOWS DOWN THE GPIB INTERFACE.
120 ′
130 DEF SEG = &HC000′BASE ADDRESS OF CEC CARD
140 INIT=0: TRANSMIT=3: RECV=6:′ADDRESSES OF CEC FIRM WARE ROUTINES
150 ADDR%=21: SYS%=0′CONTROLLER ADDRESS
160 INZ$ = ″IFC UNT UNL MTA LISTEN 23 DATA ′Z′ 13″
170 ′
180 Q1$ = ″IFC MTA LISTEN 23 DATA ′Q1′ 13″
190 Q2$ = ″IFC MTA LISTEN 23 DATA ′Q2′ 13″
200 X6$ = ″IFC MTA LISTEN 23 DATA ′X6, ″
210 LISN$ = ″IFC UNT UNL MLA TALK 23″
220 ′
230 ′
240 CALL INIT(ADDR%,SYS%)′INIT X6 OUTPUT TO ZERO
250 CALL TRANSMIT(INZ$,STATUS%)′RESET SR530
260 GOSUB 600′CHECK TRANSMIT STATUS
270 ′
280 X = 0′INIT X6 OUTPUT TO ZERO
290 ′
300 CALL TRANSMIT(Q1$,STATUS%)′READ CHANNEL 1 OUTPUT
310 GOSUB 600
320 GOSUB 510′GET RESULT
330 V1 = VAL(ANS$)′INTO V1
340 ′
350 CALL TRANSMIT(Q2$,STATUS%)′READ CHANNEL 2 OUTPUT
360 GOSUB 600
370 GOSUB 510′GET RESULT
380 V1 = VAL(ANS$)′INTO V2
In this program, the CEC card's ROM starts at
OC0000H, the system controller's address is 21,
and the SR530 has been assigned as GPIB
address 23.
To monitor the GPIB activity with an RS232
terminal, SW1-6 should be down, and the ASCII
terminal should be attached to the rear panel
RS232 connector.
51
390 ′
400 PRINT “CH1 = ″;V1; ″CH2 =″;V2
410 ′
420 X = X + .0025′INCREMENT X6 OUTPUT BY 2.5 MV
430 IF X>10 THEN X 0′RESET RAMP
440 X$ = X6$ + STR$(X) + ″′ 13″′MAKE X6 COMMAND STRING
450 CALL TRANSMIT (X$,STATUS%)′SET NEW X6 VOLTAGE
460 GOSUB 600
470 ′
480 GOTO 300′LOOP FOREVER
490 ′
500 ′ GET AN ANSWER STRING FROM THE SR530
510 CALL TRANSMIT(LISN$,STATUS%) ′MAKE SR530 A TALKER
520 GOSUB 600
530 ANS$=SPACE$(10)′INIT ANSWER STRING
540 CALL RECV(ANS$,LENGTH%STATUS%)′READ RESULT INTO ANS$
550 GOSUB 600
560 RETURN
570 ′
580 ′
590 ′ CHECK STATUS OF LAST TRANSMISSION FOR ERRORS
600 IF STATUS%=0 THEN RETURN′STATUS OKAY
610 PRINT ″STATUS CODE = ″;STATUS%;″ ON GPIB: ERROR″
620 STOP
52
Program Example 5:
HP85 via GPIB
This program provides an example of an HP85 program using the GPIB interface which could be used to
control the lockin amplifier. In this example, the SR530 should be addressed as device #16 by setting the
switch bank SW1 per the instructions Page 7.
This section contains the parts lists and
schematics for the SR530 lock-in amplifier.
The first digit of any part number can be used to
locate the schematic diagram for the part. For
example, R415 is located on sheet 4 of the
schematic diagrams.
54
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
Oscillator Board Parts List
REF.SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
C 15-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 25-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 35-00102-5174.7UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 45-00054-512.047UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 55-00087-516390PCapacitor, Silver Mica, 500V, 5%, DM15
C 65-00102-5174.7UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 75-00014-501390PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 85-00034-526100UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 95-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 105-00034-526100UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 115-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
P 14-00016-44510KPot, Multi-Turn, Side Adjust
P 24-00003-440100KTrim Pot, Single Turn, In-Line Leads
P 34-00016-44510KPot, Multi-Turn, Side Adjust
PC17-00037-701SR501Printed Circuit Board
R 14-00079-4014.7KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 24-00083-40147KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 34-00202-407698Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 44-00189-40741.2KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 54-00186-4074.22KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 64-00190-40742.2KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 74-00186-4074.22KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 84-00202-407698Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 94-00078-40139KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 104-00186-4074.22KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 114-00022-4011.0MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 124-00042-40115KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 134-00070-40130KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 144-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 154-00022-4011.0MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 164-00079-4014.7KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 174-00104-40182KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 184-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 194-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 204-00188-4074.99KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 214-00188-4074.99KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 224-00022-4011.0MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 234-00022-4011.0MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 244-00031-401100Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 254-00031-401100Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
SW12-00013-215DPDTSwitch, Toggle Right Angle PCB Mount
SW22-00013-215DPDTSwitch, Toggle Right Angle PCB Mount
U 13-00087-340LF347Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 23-00085-340ICL8038Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 33-00118-32578L15Transistor, TO-92 Package
U 43-00124-32579L15Transistor, TO-92 Package
Z 00-00100-0401/4X1/16Washer, Flat
Z 00-00122-0532-1/4" #24Wire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00136-0538-1/2" #24Wire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
55
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
Main Board Parts List
REF.SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
BR13-00062-340KBP201G/BR-81DIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
BR23-00062-340KBP201G/BR-81DIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
BT16-00001-612BR-2/3A 2PIN PCBattery
C 1015-00069-513.1UCapacitor, Mylar/Poly, 50V, 5%, Rad
C 1025-00069-513.1UCapacitor, Mylar/Poly, 50V, 5%, Rad
C 1035-00038-50910UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 50V, 20%, Rad
C 1045-00008-50122PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 1055-00002-501100PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 1065-00008-50122PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 1075-00030-5202200UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 16V, 20%, Rad
C 1085-00030-5202200UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 16V, 20%, Rad
C 1105-00038-50910UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 50V, 20%, Rad
C 1115-00081-5161PCapacitor, Silver Mica, 500V, 5%, DM15
C 1165-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 1175-00035-52147UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 25V, 20%, Rad
C 1185-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 1205-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 1215-00035-52147UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 25V, 20%, Rad
C 1225-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 1235-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 1245-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 1255-00030-5202200UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 16V, 20%, Rad
C 1265-00030-5202200UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 16V, 20%, Rad
C 1275-00057-512.22UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 1285-00057-512.22UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 1295-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 1315-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 1325-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 1335-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 1345-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 1365-00003-50110PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 1375-00003-50110PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 1455-00009-50124PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 1465-00009-50124PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 1475-00003-50110PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 1485-00017-50147PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 2015-00020-5017.5PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 2025-00109-525150PCapacitor, Poly s tyr ene, 50V, 5%, Ax
C 2035-00048-566.0015UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 2045-00051-512.015UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 2055-00055-512.15UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 2065-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 2075-00059-512.47UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 2085-00003-50110PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 2095-00109-525150PCapacitor, Poly s tyr ene, 50V, 5%, Ax
C 2105-00048-566.0015UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 2115-00051-512.015UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 2125-00055-512.15UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 2135-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
56
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
C 2145-00059-512.47UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 2155-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 2165-00056-512.1UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 2175-00038-50910UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 50V, 20%, Rad
C 2185-00038-50910UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 50V, 20%, Rad
C 2305-00055-512.15UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 3015-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 3025-00003-50110PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 3035-00009-50124PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 3045-00110-525560PCapacitor, Poly s tyr ene, 50V, 5%, Ax
C 3055-00038-50910UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 50V, 20%, Rad
C 3065-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 3075-00049-566.001UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 3085-00058-512.33UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 3105-00008-50122PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 3115-00008-50122PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 3125-00017-50147PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 3135-00017-50147PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 3145-00056-512.1UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 3155-00038-50910UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 50V, 20%, Rad
C 3175-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 3185-00049-566.001UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 3195-00058-512.33UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 3205-00049-566.001UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 3215-00003-50110PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 3225-00003-50110PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 3235-00035-52147UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 25V, 20%, Rad
C 3245-00035-52147UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 25V, 20%, Rad
C 3255-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 3265-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 3275-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 3285-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 3295-00033-52047UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 16V, 20%, Rad
C 3305-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 3315-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 3325-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 3335-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 3345-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 3355-00016-501470PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 3365-00016-501470PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 3375-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 3385-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 4015-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 4025-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 4035-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 4045-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 4055-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 4065-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 4075-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 4085-00003-50110PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 4095-00056-512.1UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
57
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
C 4105-00056-512.1UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 4115-00056-512.1UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 4125-00056-512.1UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 4135-00049-566.001UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 4145-00053-512.033UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 4155-00072-51310UCapacitor, Mylar/Poly, 50V, 5%, Rad
C 4165-00056-512.1UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 4175-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 4185-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 4195-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 4205-00049-566.001UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 4215-00013-50133PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 4225-00013-50133PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 5015-00012-501330PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 5025-00136-519.01UCapacitor, Polystyrene, 50V, 5%, Rad
C 5035-00007-501220PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 5045-00002-501100PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 5055-00008-50122PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 5065-00054-512.047UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 5075-00054-512.047UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 5085-00054-512.047UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 5095-00054-512.047UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 5105-00054-512.047UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 5115-00054-512.047UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 5125-00054-512.047UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 5135-00054-512.047UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 5145-00049-566.001UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 5155-00049-566.001UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 5165-00049-566.001UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 5175-00002-501100PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 5185-00056-512.1UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 5195-00049-566.001UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 5205-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 5215-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 5235-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 5255-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 5265-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 5275-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 7015-00007-501220PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 7025-00007-501220PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 7035-00040-5091.0UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 50V, 20%, Rad
C 7045-00040-5091.0UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 50V, 20%, Rad
C 7055-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 7065-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 7075-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 7085-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 7095-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 7105-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 7115-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 7125-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 8015-00012-501330PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
58
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
C 8025-00012-501330PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 8035-00012-501330PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 8045-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 8055-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 8065-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 8075-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 8085-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 8095-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9015-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9025-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9035-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9045-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9055-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9065-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9075-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9085-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9095-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9105-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9115-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9125-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9135-00035-52147UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 25V, 20%, Rad
C 9145-00035-52147UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 25V, 20%, Rad
C 9155-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9165-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9175-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9185-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9195-00035-52147UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 25V, 20%, Rad
C 9205-00035-52147UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 25V, 20%, Rad
C 9235-00192-54222U MINCap, Mini Electrolytic, 50V, 20% Radial
C 9245-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9255-00046-5102200UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 50V, 20%, Ax
C 9265-00046-5102200UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 50V, 20%, Ax
C 9275-00192-54222U MINCap, Mini Electrolytic, 50V, 20% Radial
C 9285-00192-54222U MINCap, Mini Electrolytic, 50V, 20% Radial
C 9295-00034-526100UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9305-00034-526100UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9315-00034-526100UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9325-00034-526100UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9335-00103-5241.0UCapacitor, Tantalum, 50V, 20%, Rad
C 9345-00103-5241.0UCapacitor, Tantalum, 50V, 20%, Rad
C 9355-00036-5226800UCap, Electro. 25V 10% Ax, Mallory TCX
C 9365-00056-512.1UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 9375-00056-512.1UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 9385-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 9395-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
CN8011-00014-1609 PIN DConnector, D-Sub, Right Angle PC, Female
CN8021-00016-160RS232 25 PIN DConnector, D-Sub, Right Angle PC, Female
CN8031-00238-161GPIB SHIELDEDConnector, IEEE488, Reverse, R/A, Female
CX15-00010-501270PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
CX7135-00014-501390PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
CX7145-00014-501390PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
59
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
CY16-00010-6204.000 MHZCrystal
D 1013-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 1023-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 1033-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 1043-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 1053-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 1063-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 2013-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 2023-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 2033-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 2043-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 3013-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 3023-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 3033-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 4013-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 4023-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 4033-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 4043-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 5013-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 5023-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 7013-00007-3011N747ADiode
D 7023-00203-3011N5711Diode
D 7033-00203-3011N5711Diode
D 7043-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 9013-00003-3011N4007Diode
D 9023-00003-3011N4007Diode
D 9033-00003-3011N4007Diode
D 9043-00003-3011N4007Diode
FU16-00004-6111A 3AGFuse
P 1014-00006-44020Trim Pot, Single Turn, In-Line Leads
P 1024-00012-44120KPot, Multi-Turn Trim, 3/8" Square Top Ad
P 1034-00012-44120KPot, Multi-Turn Trim, 3/8" Square Top Ad
P 1044-00013-44150KPot, Multi-Turn Trim, 3/8" Square Top Ad
P 1054-00014-4415KPot, Multi-Turn Trim, 3/8" Square Top Ad
P 4014-00011-44110KPot, Multi-Turn Trim, 3/8" Square Top Ad
P 4024-00011-44110KPot, Multi-Turn Trim, 3/8" Square Top Ad
P 4034-00011-44110KPot, Multi-Turn Trim, 3/8" Square Top Ad
P 4044-00011-44110KPot, Multi-Turn Trim, 3/8" Square Top Ad
P 5014-00002-440100Trim Pot, Single Turn, In-Line Leads
P 5024-00002-440100Trim Pot, Single Turn, In-Line Leads
PC17-00036-701SR500Printed Circuit Board
Q 1013-00016-3232N6485Transistor, TO-71 Package
Q 1023-00016-3232N6485Transistor, TO-71 Package
Q 1033-00031-325MPSA18Transistor, TO-92 Package
Q 2013-00887-325MPS2907ATransistor, TO-92 Package
Q 2023-00026-3252N5210Transistor, TO-92 Package
Q 5023-00026-3252N5210Transistor, TO-92 Package
Q 7013-00026-3252N5210Transistor, TO-92 Package
Q 7023-00026-3252N5210Transistor, TO-92 Package
Q 7033-00026-3252N5210Transistor, TO-92 Package
R 1014-00033-404100MResistor, Carbon Comp, 1/4W, 5%
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
60
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
R 1024-00033-404100MResistor, Carbon Comp, 1/4W, 5%
R 1034-00030-40110Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 1044-00031-401100Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 1054-00031-401100Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 1084-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1094-00199-4076.81KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1104-00199-4076.81KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1114-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1124-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1134-00145-407110Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1144-00145-407110Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1154-00047-4012.2Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 1164-00196-4076.04KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1174-00210-4079.09KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1184-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1194-00193-407499Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1204-00180-407301Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1214-00141-407100Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1224-00141-407100Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1264-00210-4079.09KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1274-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1284-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 1304-00082-401470KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 1324-00082-401470KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 1334-00179-40730.1KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1344-00179-40730.1KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1354-00131-4071.00MResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1384-00052-40120Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 1394-00052-40120Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 1404-00150-40713.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1414-00174-407280Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1424-00168-40722.6KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1434-00150-40713.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1444-00157-40716.9KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1454-00157-40716.9KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1464-00193-407499Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1474-00180-407301Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1484-00141-407100Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1494-00141-407100Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1504-00179-40730.1KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1514-00201-407634Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1524-00195-40754.9KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1534-00176-4073.01KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1544-00178-4073.83KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1554-00211-4079.53KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1564-00193-407499Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1574-00180-407301Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1584-00141-407100Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1594-00141-407100Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1604-00033-404100MResistor, Carbon Comp, 1/4W, 5%
R 1614-00204-407750Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
61
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
R 1624-00188-4074.99KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1634-00035-40110MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 1654-00215-407909Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1664-00141-407100Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1674-00215-407909Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1684-00141-407100Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1694-00134-4071.24KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1704-00144-407107Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1714-00182-40733.2Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1724-00035-40110MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 1734-00193-407499Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1744-00180-407301Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1754-00165-407200Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1764-00211-4079.53KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1774-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 1784-00035-40110MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 2014-00135-4071.50KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 2024-00194-4075.11KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 2034-00138-40710.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 2044-00138-40710.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 2054-00153-40715.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 2064-00138-40710.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 2074-00135-4071.50KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 2084-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 2094-00150-40713.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 2104-00033-404100MResistor, Carbon Comp, 1/4W, 5%
R 2114-00138-40710.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 2124-00135-4071.50KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 2134-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 2144-00150-40713.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 2154-00033-404100MResistor, Carbon Comp, 1/4W, 5%
R 2164-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 2174-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 2184-00035-40110MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 2194-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 2204-00177-4073.48KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 2214-00039-401120KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 2224-00096-40162KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 2234-00039-401120KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 2244-00094-4016.8KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 2254-00063-4013.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 2264-00094-4016.8KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 2274-00063-4013.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 2284-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 2294-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3014-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3024-00138-40710.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3034-00138-40710.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3044-00045-4012.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3054-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3064-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
62
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
R 3074-00040-40113KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3084-00193-407499Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3094-00073-401330KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3104-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3114-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3124-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3134-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3144-00069-401300KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3154-00099-401680KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3164-00099-401680KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3174-00093-4016.2KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3184-00138-40710.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3194-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3204-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3214-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3224-00170-407249KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3234-00199-4076.81KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3244-00199-4076.81KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3254-00163-4072.80KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3264-00150-40713.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3274-00159-4072.10KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3284-00029-4011.8KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3294-00088-40151KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3304-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3324-00161-4072.49KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3334-00029-4011.8KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3344-00197-4076.49KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3354-00088-40151KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3364-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3374-00035-40110MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3384-00030-40110Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3394-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3404-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3414-00025-4011.2MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3424-00073-401330KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3434-00046-4012.0MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3444-00069-401300KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3454-00022-4011.0MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3464-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3474-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3484-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3494-00069-401300KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3504-00093-4016.2KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3514-00138-40710.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3524-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3534-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3544-00203-40775.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3554-00187-4074.53KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3564-00160-4072.26KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3574-00163-4072.80KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3584-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
63
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
R 3594-00045-4012.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3604-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3614-00084-4015.1KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3624-00181-40732.4KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3634-00132-4071.10KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3644-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3654-00045-4012.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3664-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3674-00151-407130KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3684-00156-40716.2KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3694-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3704-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3714-00030-40110Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3724-00023-4011.1MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 3734-00033-404100MResistor, Carbon Comp, 1/4W, 5%
R 3744-00033-404100MResistor, Carbon Comp, 1/4W, 5%
R 3754-00033-404100MResistor, Carbon Comp, 1/4W, 5%
R 3764-00033-404100MResistor, Carbon Comp, 1/4W, 5%
R 3774-00187-4074.53KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 3784-00045-4012.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 4014-00217-4081.000KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 4024-00217-4081.000KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 4034-00085-4015.1MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 4044-00217-4081.000KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 4054-00217-4081.000KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 4064-00193-407499Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4074-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4084-00131-4071.00MResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4094-00022-4011.0MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 4104-00217-4081.000KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 4114-00193-407499Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4124-00217-4081.000KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 4134-00203-40775.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4144-00080-40147Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 4154-00142-407100KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4174-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 4184-00132-4071.10KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4194-00179-40730.1KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4204-00183-407348KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4214-00155-407150KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4224-00184-40737.4KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4234-00212-4079.76KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4244-00161-4072.49KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4254-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 4264-00045-4012.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 4274-00131-4071.00MResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4284-00131-4071.00MResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4294-00146-407110KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4304-00140-40710.2KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 4314-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 4324-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
64
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
R 4334-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5014-00022-4011.0MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5024-00022-4011.0MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5034-00022-4011.0MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5044-00022-4011.0MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5054-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5064-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5074-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5084-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5094-00218-40810.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 5104-00219-40820.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 5114-00218-40810.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 5124-00219-40820.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 5134-00166-407200KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 5144-00207-407806KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 5154-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5164-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5184-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5194-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5204-00086-40151Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5214-00086-40151Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5224-00218-40810.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 5234-00218-40810.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 5244-00078-40139KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5254-00059-40122KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5264-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5274-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5284-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5294-00057-401220Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5304-00210-4079.09KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 5314-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 5324-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5334-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5344-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5354-00057-401220Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5364-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5374-00057-401220Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5384-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5394-00057-401220Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5404-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5414-00057-401220Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5424-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5434-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5444-00042-40115KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5454-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5464-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5474-00042-40115KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5484-00054-401200KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 5494-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 7014-00031-401100Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 7024-00079-4014.7KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
65
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
R 7034-00027-4011.5KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 7054-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 7064-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 7074-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 7084-00069-401300KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 7094-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 7104-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 7114-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 7124-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 8014-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 8024-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 8034-00065-4013.3KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 9014-00107-40210Resistor, Carbon Comp, 1/2W, 5%
R 9024-00107-40210Resistor, Carbon Comp, 1/2W, 5%
R 9034-00060-401240Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 9044-00024-4011.2KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 9054-00024-4011.2KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 9064-00060-401240Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 9074-00107-40210Resistor, Carbon Comp, 1/2W, 5%
R 9084-00107-40210Resistor, Carbon Comp, 1/2W, 5%
R 9094-00053-401200Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 9104-00063-4013.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 9114-00063-4013.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 9124-00053-401200Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 9134-00107-40210Resistor, Carbon Comp, 1/2W, 5%
R 9144-00107-40210Resistor, Carbon Comp, 1/2W, 5%
RN4014-00220-42010KX8Resistor Network, DIP, 1/4W,2%,8 Ind
RN8014-00225-425100KX9Resistor Network SIP 1/4W 2% (Common)
RN8024-00225-425100KX9Resistor Network SIP 1/4W 2% (Common)
SO7021-00026-15028 PIN 600 MILSocket, THRU-HOLE
SW12-00014-207SPSTX8Switch, DIP
SW22-00014-207SPSTX8Switch, DIP
SW6012-00017-2164PDTSwitch, Rocker, PCB Mount (LHS of 510)
SW6022-00004-213DPDTSwitch, Rocker, PCB Mount (RHS of 510)
T 16-00007-610SR510/530Transformer
U 1018-00085-860SR513 ASSYSRS sub assemblies
U 1028-00085-860SR513 ASSYSRS sub assemblies
U 1033-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 1043-00118-32578L15Transistor, TO-92 Package
U 1053-00124-32579L15Transistor, TO-92 Package
U 1063-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 1073-00130-3405532AIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 1083-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 1093-00088-340LF353Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 1103-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 1113-00089-340LF357Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 1123-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 1133-00089-340LF357Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 1143-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 1153-00089-340LF357Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 1173-00088-340LF353Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
66
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
U 1183-00130-3405532AIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 2013-00087-340LF347Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 2023-00093-340LM13600Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 2033-00073-340CD4052Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 2043-00073-340CD4052Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 2053-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 2063-00038-34074HC139Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 2073-00038-34074HC139Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 2083-00087-340LF347Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3013-00088-340LF353Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3033-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3043-00094-340LM311Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3053-00075-340CD4538Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3063-00072-340CD4046Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3073-00093-340LM13600Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3083-00066-340CA3140EIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3093-00093-340LM13600Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3103-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3113-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3123-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3133-00049-34074HC74Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3143-00094-340LM311Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3153-00094-340LM311Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3163-00072-340CD4046Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3173-00093-340LM13600Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3183-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3193-00066-340CA3140EIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3203-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3213-00066-340CA3140EIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3223-00093-340LM13600Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3233-00093-340LM13600Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3243-00094-340LM311Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3253-00091-340LF412Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3263-00068-340CD4018Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3273-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3283-00094-340LM311Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 3293-00094-340LM311Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 4013-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 4023-00091-340LF412Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 4033-00090-340LF411Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 4043-00106-340LT1007Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 4053-00074-340CD4066Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 4063-00057-340AD534Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 4073-00090-340LF411Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 4083-00106-340LT1007Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 4093-00090-340LF411Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 4103-00084-340ICL7650Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 4113-00126-33551A05Relay
U 4123-00126-33551A05Relay
U 4133-00126-33551A05Relay
U 4143-00126-33551A05Relay
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
67
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
U 4153-00126-33551A05Relay
U 4163-00084-340ICL7650Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 4173-00126-33551A05Relay
U 4183-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 4193-00090-340LF411Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 4203-00064-340CA3081Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 4213-00035-34074C74Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5013-00087-340LF347Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5023-00058-340AD7524Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5033-00046-34074HC374Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5043-00077-340DG528Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5053-00059-340AD7542JNIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5063-00058-340AD7524Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5073-00077-340DG528Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5083-00087-340LF347Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5093-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5103-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5113-00087-340LF347Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5123-00087-340LF347Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5133-00087-340LF347Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5143-00094-340LM311Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5153-00087-340LF347Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5163-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 5173-00092-340LH0071Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7013-00132-340Z80A-CPUIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7033-00081-3412KX8-100STATIC RAM, I.C.
U 7043-00491-340UPD71054CIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7053-00037-34074HC138Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7063-00037-34074HC138Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7073-00037-34074HC138Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7083-00040-34074HC157Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7093-00049-34074HC74Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7103-00045-34074HC32Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7113-00051-34074HCU04Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7123-00047-34074HC4040Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7133-00049-34074HC74Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7143-00042-34074HC175Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7153-00042-34074HC175Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7163-00044-34074HC244Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7173-00046-34074HC374Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7183-00039-34074HC14Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7193-00046-34074HC374Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7203-00046-34074HC374Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7213-00046-34074HC374Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 7223-00045-34074HC32Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 8013-00493-340UPD71051CIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 8023-00111-340MC68488Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 8033-00044-34074HC244Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 8043-00044-34074HC244Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 8053-00049-34074HC74Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 8063-00109-340MC1488Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
68
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
U 8073-00110-340MC1489Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 8083-00078-340DS75160AIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 8093-00117-32578L12Transistor, TO-92 Package
U 8103-00123-32579L12Transistor, TO-92 Package
U 8113-00079-340DS75161AIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 9013-00095-331LM317KVoltage Regulator, TO-3 Metal Can
U 9023-00099-331LM337KVoltage Regulator, TO-3 Metal Can
U 9033-00114-3297815Voltage Reg., TO-220 (TAB) Package
U 9043-00114-3297815Voltage Reg., TO-220 (TAB) Package
U 9053-00114-3297815Voltage Reg., TO-220 (TAB) Package
U 9063-00120-3297915Voltage Reg., TO-220 (TAB) Package
U 9073-00120-3297915Voltage Reg., TO-220 (TAB) Package
U 9083-00120-3297915Voltage Reg., TO-220 (TAB) Package
U 9093-00113-3407805CKIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 9103-00116-32578L05Transistor, TO-92 Package
U 9113-00096-340LM317LIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 9123-00100-340LM337LIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
Z 00-00005-007SR530Heat Sinks
Z 00-00014-0026J4Power_Entry Hardware
Z 00-00016-000TIE ANCHORHardware, Misc.
Z 00-00017-002TRANSCOVERPower_Entry Hardware
Z 00-00019-003MICAInsulators
Z 00-00025-0053/8"Lugs
Z 00-00043- 01 14-40 KEPNut, Kep
Z 00-00048- 01 16-32 KEPNut, Kep
Z 00-00064-0276-20X5/8PScrew, Sheet Metal
Z 00-00079-0314-40X3/16 M/FStandoff
Z 00-00084-03236154Termination
Z 00-00089-0334"Tie
Z 00-00095-040#4 FLATWasher, Flat
Z 00-00096-041#4 SPLITWasher, Split
Z 00-00113-05310" #24Wire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00117-05312" #24Wire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00119-05315" #24Wire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00128-0534" #24Wire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00130-0505-5/8" #18Wire #18 UL1007 Stripped 3/8x3/8 No Tin
Z 00-00132-0536-1/2" #24Wire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00136-0538-1/2" #24Wire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00153-057GROMMET2Grommet
Z 00-00185-0216-32X3/8PPScrew, Panhead Phillips
Z 00-00187-0214-40X1/4PPScrew, Panhead Phillips
Z 00-00207-003TO-5Insulators
Z 00-00222-0216-32X1/4PPScrew, Panhead Phillips
Z 00-00225-05217" #22 BLACKWire #22 UL1007
Z 00-00226-05217" #22 WHITEWire #22 UL1007
Z 00-00227-05217" #22 REDWire #22 UL1007
Z 00-00228-05217" #22 GREENWire #22 UL1007
Z 00-00231-043#4 SHOULDERWasher, nylon
Z 00-00241-0214-40X3/16PPScrew, Panhead Phillips
Z 00-00249-0216-32X1-1/2PPScrew, Panhead Phillips
Z 00-00256-043#6 SHOULDERWasher, nylon
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
69
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
Z 00-00257-000HANDLE3Hardware, Misc.
Z 00-00371-0264-40X3/16PFScrew, Black, All Types
Z 00-00500-000554808-1Hardware, Misc.
Z 00-00521-0483" #18Wire, #18 UL1015 Strip 3/8 x 3/8 No Tin
Z 00-00526-04810-1/2" #18Wire, #18 UL1015 Strip 3/8 x 3/8 No Tin
Z 00-00893-0268-32X3/8PFScrew, Black, All Types
Z 01-00003-120BNCConnector, BNC
Z 01-00010-13020 PIN ELHConnector, Male
Z 01-00012-13520 PIN CARDConnector, Card Edge
Z 01-00013-13540 PIN CARDConnector, Card Edge
Z 01-00029-150TO-3Socket, THRU-HOLE
Z 01-00053-172USALine Cord
Z 07-00201-720SR500-32Fabricated Part
Z 07-00202-720SR500-33Fabricated Part
Z 07-00210-720SR530-22Fabricated Part
Z 07-00212-720SR530-26Fabricated Part
Z 07-00213-720SR530-27Fabricated Part
Z 07-00214-720SR530-28Fabricated Part
Z 09-00144-9073/32"BLACKShrink Tubing
Z 09-00188-91 7SR510/530 SERProduct Labels
Z 09-00216-9071/8" BLACKShrink Tubing
Z 09-00217-9073/16" BLACKShrink Tubing
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
Front Panel Board Parts List
REF.SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
C 6075-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 6085-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 6095-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 6105-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 61005-00019-50168PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 61015-00019-50168PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 61025-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 61035-00052-512.01UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 61055-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 61065-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
D 6013-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 6023-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 6033-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 6043-00004-3011N4148Diode
DS6013- 0001 2- 30 6GREENLED, Rectangular
DS6023- 0001 2- 30 6GREENLED, Rectangular
DS6033- 0001 2- 30 6GREENLED, Rectangular
DS6043- 0001 2- 30 6GREENLED, Rectangular
DS6053- 0001 2- 30 6GREENLED, Rectangular
DS6063- 0001 2- 30 6GREENLED, Rectangular
DS6073- 0001 2- 30 6GREENLED, Rectangular
DS6083- 0001 2- 30 6GREENLED, Rectangular
DS6093- 0001 2- 30 6GREENLED, Rectangular
DS6103- 0001 2- 30 6GREENLED, Rectangular
RN6034-00226-425150X9Resistor Network SIP 1/4W 2% (Common)
RN6044-00222-425150X7Resistor Network SIP 1/4W 2% (Common)
U 6013-00086-340ICM7211AMIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6023-00086-340ICM7211AMIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6033-00086-340ICM7211AMIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6043-00071-340CD4030Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6053-00071-340CD4030Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6063-00071-340CD4030Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6073-00046-34074HC374Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6083-00042-34074HC175Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6093-00044-34074HC244Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6103-00053-34074LS164Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6113-00053-34074LS164Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6123-00053-34074LS164Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6133-00053-34074LS164Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6143-00053-34074LS164Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6153-00053-34074LS164Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6163-00053-34074LS164Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6173-00053-34074LS164Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 6183-00053-34074LS164Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
Z 00-00042-0104-40 HEXNut, Hex
Z 00-00077-0303/16"X5/16"NYLNSpacer
Z 00-00102-04 2#10 LOCKWasher, lock
Z 00-00104-043#4 NYLONWasher, nylon
Z 00-00106-044CLEARWindow
Z 00-00111-0531-3/4"#24BWire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00112-0531-3/4"#24RWire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00117-05312" #24Wire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00118-05314" #24Wire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00119-05315" #24Wire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00126-0533-1/2" #24Wire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00128-0534" #24Wire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00129-0535" #24Wire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00136-0538-1/2" #24Wire #24 UL1007 Strip 1/4x1/4 Tin
Z 00-00139-0549" #26 X20Wire #26 UL1061
Z 00-00203-032323914Termination
Z 01-00011-13020 PIN IDPConnector, Male
Z 01-00073-120INSLConnector, BNC
Z 01-00145-13120 PIN DIF POLConnector, Female
Z 07-00305-710SR530-31Front Panel
Z 07-00306-709SR530-32-36Lexan Overlay
Z 09-00815-924DBL-SIDED 1/2"Tape, All types
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
Quad Board Parts List
REF.SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
C 10015-00016-501470PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 10025-00038-50910UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 50V, 20%, Rad
C 10045-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 10055-00049-566.001UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
73
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
C 10065-00058-512.33UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 10075-00049-566.001UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 10085-00003-50110PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 10095-00003-50110PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 10105-00035-52147UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 25V, 20%, Rad
C 10115-00035-52147UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 25V, 20%, Rad
C 10125-00035-52147UCapacitor, Electrolytic, 25V, 20%, Rad
C 10135-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 10145-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 10155-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 10165-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 10175-00100-5172.2UCapacitor, Tantalum, 35V, 20%, Rad
C 10185-00008-50122PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 11015-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 11025-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 11035-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 11045-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 11055-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 11065-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 11075-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 11085-00003-50110PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 11095-00056-512.1UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 11105-00056-512.1UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 11115-00056-512.1UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 11125-00056-512.1UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 11135-00049-566.001UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 11145-00053-512.033UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 11155-00072-51310UCapacitor, Mylar/Poly, 50V, 5%, Rad
C 11165-00056-512.1UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 11175-00060-5121.0UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 11205-00049-566.001UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 11215-00013-50133PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 11225-00013-50133PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 11235-00054-512.047UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 11245-00054-512.047UCap, Stacked Metal Film 50V 5% -40/+85c
C 11255-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 11265-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 12015-00012-501330PCapacitor, Ceramic Disc, 50V, 10%, SL
C 12025-00136-519.01UCapacitor, Polystyrene, 50V, 5%, Rad
C 12035-00049-566.001UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 12045-00049-566.001UCap, Polyester Film 50V 5% -40/+85c Rad
C 12055-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 12065-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 12075-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
C 12085-00023-529.1UCap, Monolythic Ceramic, 50V, 20%, Z5U
D 10013-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 10023-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 11033-00004-3011N4148Diode
D 11043-00004-3011N4148Diode
P 11014-00016-44510KPot, Multi-Turn, Side Adjust
P 11024-00016-44510KPot, Multi-Turn, Side Adjust
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
74
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
P 11034-00016-44510KPot, Multi-Turn, Side Adjust
P 11044-00016-44510KPot, Multi-Turn, Side Adjust
P 12014-00016-44510KPot, Multi-Turn, Side Adjust
P 12024-00016-44510KPot, Multi-Turn, Side Adjust
PC17-00040-701SR522Printed Circuit Board
Q 12013-00026-3252N5210Transistor, TO-92 Package
R 10014-00045-4012.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10024-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10034-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10044-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10054-00069-401300KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10064-00093-4016.2KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10074-00022-4011.0MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10084-00069-401300KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10094-00046-4012.0MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10104-00073-401330KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10114-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10124-00138-40710.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 10134-00203-40775.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 10144-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10154-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10164-00187-4074.53KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 10174-00160-4072.26KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 10184-00163-4072.80KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 10194-00084-4015.1KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10204-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10214-00181-40732.4KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 10224-00132-4071.10KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 10234-00151-407130KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 10244-00156-40716.2KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 10254-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 10264-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 10274-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10284-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10294-00045-4012.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10304-00088-40151KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10314-00030-40110Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10324-00030-40110Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10334-00030-40110Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 10344-00033-404100MResistor, Carbon Comp, 1/4W, 5%
R 10354-00033-404100MResistor, Carbon Comp, 1/4W, 5%
R 10364-00187-4074.53KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 10374-00045-4012.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 11014-00217-4081.000KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 11024-00217-4081.000KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 11034-00085-4015.1MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 11044-00217-4081.000KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 11054-00217-4081.000KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 11064-00193-407499Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11074-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11084-00131-4071.00MResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
75
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
R 11094-00022-4011.0MResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 11104-00217-4081.000KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 11114-00193-407499Resistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11124-00217-4081.000KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 11134-00203-40775.0KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11144-00080-40147Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 11154-00142-407100KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11164-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 11174-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 11184-00132-4071.10KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11194-00179-40730.1KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11204-00183-407348KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11214-00155-407150KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11224-00184-40737.4KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11234-00212-4079.76KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11244-00161-4072.49KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11254-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 11264-00045-4012.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 11274-00131-4071.00MResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11284-00131-4071.00MResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11294-00146-407110KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11304-00140-40710.2KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 11324-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 11334-00021-4011.0KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 12014-00218-40810.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 12024-00219-40820.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 12034-00218-40810.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 12044-00219-40820.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 0.1%, 25ppm
R 12054-00210-4079.09KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 12064-00130-4071.00KResistor, Metal Film, 1/8W, 1%, 50PPM
R 12074-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 12084-00032-401100KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 12094-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 12104-00057-401220Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 12114-00034-40110KResistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
R 12124-00057-401220Resistor, Carbon Film, 1/4W, 5%
U 10013-00094-340LM311Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 10023-00072-340CD4046Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 10033-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 10043-00094-340LM311Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 10053-00093-340LM13600Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 10063-00066-340CA3140EIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 10073-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 10083-00066-340CA3140EIntegrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 10093-00093-340LM13600Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 10103-00093-340LM13600Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 10113-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 10123-00094-340LM311Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 10133-00068-340CD4018Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 10143-00091-340LF412Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 11013-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
76
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
REF.
U 11023-00091-340LF412Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 11033-00090-340LF411Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 11043-00106-340LT1007Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 11053-00074-340CD4066Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 11063-00057-340AD534Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 11073-00090-340LF411Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 11083-00106-340LT1007Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 11093-00090-340LF411Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 11103-00084-340ICL7650Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 11113-00126-33551A05Relay
U 11123-00126-33551A05Relay
U 11133-00126-33551A05Relay
U 11143-00126-33551A05Relay
U 11153-00126-33551A05Relay
U 11163-00084-340ICL7650Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 11173-00126-33551A05Relay
U 11183-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 11193-00090-340LF411Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 11203-00088-340LF353Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 11213-00035-34074C74Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 12013-00058-340AD7524Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 12023-00087-340LF347Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 12033-00076-340DG211Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 12043-00090-340LF411Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
U 12053-00090-340LF411Integrated Circuit (Thru-hole Pkg)
SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
Miscellaneous Parts List
REF.SRS part#VALUEDESCRIPTION
U 7023-00161-34227128-150EPROM/PROM, I.C.
Z 00-00045-0134-40 MININut, Mini
Z 00-00078-0314-40X1 M/FStandoff
Z 00-00167-0236-32X1/2RPScrew, Roundhead Phillips
Z 00-00179-000RIGHT FOOTHardware, Misc.
Z 00-00180-000LEFT FOOTHardware, Misc.
Z 00-00185-0216-32X3/8PPScrew, Panhead Phillips
Z 00-00187-0214-40X1/4PPScrew, Panhead Phillips
Z 00-00204-000REAR FOOTHardware, Misc.
Z 00-00209-0214-40X3/8PPScrew, Panhead Phillips
Z 00-00247-0266-32X1/4 TRUSSPScrew, Black, All Types
Z 00-00248-02610-32X3/8TRUSSPScrew, Black, All Types
Z 00-00371-0264-40X3/16PFScrew, Black, All Types
Z 06-00054-611.375A 3AGFuse
Z 07-00147-720BAILFabricated Part
Z 07-00203-720SR500-34Fabricated Part
Z 07-00204-720SR500-35Fabricated Part
Z 07-00211-720SR530-25Fabricated Part
Z 07-00215-720SR530-29Fabricated Part
Z 07-00216-720SR530-30Fabricated Part
77
SR530 COMPONENT PARTS LIST
78
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