Instruction manual
Guppy Technical ManualV7.4.0
162
Controlling image capture 
• Line 1 shows the broadcast command, which stops all cameras connected 
to the same IEEE 1394 bus. It is generated by holding the Shift key down 
while clicking on Write.
• Line 2 generates a broadcast one-shot in the same way, which forces all 
connected cameras to simultaneously grab one image.
Jitter at start of exposure
The following chapter discusses the latency time which exists for all CCD models 
when either a hardware or software trigger is generated, until the actual image 
exposure starts.
Owing to the well-known fact that an Interline Transfer CCD sensor has both a 
light sensitive area and a separate storage area, it is common to interleave 
image exposure of a new frame and output that of the previous one. It makes 
continuous image flow possible, even with an external trigger.
•The Micron/Aptina CMOS sensor of the Guppy F-036 uses a pipelined 
global shutter, thus imitating the separate light sensitive and storage 
area of a CCD. For more information see Chapter Pipelined global shutter 
(only Guppy F-036) on page 142.
•The Micron/Aptina CMOS sensor of the Guppy F-503 uses an electronic 
rolling shutter and a global reset release shutter. For more information 
see Chapter Electronic rolling shutter (ERS) and global reset release shut-
ter (GRR) (only Guppy F-503) on page 143.
For the CCDs the uncertainty time delay before the start of exposure depends on 
the state of the sensor. A distinction is made as follows:
FVal is active  the sensor is reading out, the camera is busy
In this case the camera must not change horizontal timing so that the trigger 
event is synchronized with the current horizontal clock. This introduces a max. 
uncertainty which is equivalent to the line time. The row time depends on the 
sensor used and therefore can vary from model to model.
FVal is inactive  the sensor is ready, the camera is idle
In this case the camera can resynchronize the horizontal clock to the new trigger 
event, leaving only a very short uncertainty time of the master clock period.
Model Camera idle Camera busy
Guppy F-033 40.69 ns 32.29 μs
Guppy F-036 29.89 μs 29.89 μs
Guppy F-038 8.77 μs 68.06 μs
Guppy F-038 NIR 8.77 μs 68.06 μs
Guppy F-044 8.77 μs 66.94 μs
 Table 64: Jitter at exposure start










