User manual

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APPENDIX C What’s New in Version 2.10
C.1 Viewing Neighboring Sweeps During Acquisition and
Reanalysis
Neighboring sweeps can also be quickly viewed by clicking a button to move to Previous or Next viewed
sweep.
See Section 5.1.
C.2 Viewing a Sweep by clicking on an Analysis Graph Data Point
Clicking on a Analysis Graph data point will cause the sweep generating that point to be superimposed
over the current acquired or reanalysed sweep. This is particularly useful when wanting to view the
sweep from an earlier part of the experiment, or a sweep that generated an outlier data point. It is also a
simple way of finding the filename of the ADsweep file that generated a particular data point.
See Section 5.2.
C.3 Impose Single or Averaged Sweeps During Acquisition and
Reanalysis
a) Up to 8 sweeps can be imposed for each Pulse/Train sweep
b) Any number of sweeps can be averaged and then imposed as a single sweep. For example, this
would allow averaging all the sweeps occurring during the baseline, and then comparing this averaged
baseline sweep to other sweeps taken later in the experiment.
c) If sweeps are being low-pass filtered, then the imposed sweeps will also be low-pass filtered to the
same value. Changing the low-pass filter value also changes the filtering value of all the imposed
sweeps.
See Sections 5.3 and 5.4.
C.4 Internal Gain for M- and X-series boards has been added
Internal gains can be x2, x10 and x50 for the inexpensive boards like the PCIe-6321, and x1, x5, x10,
x20, x50 and x100 for the more expensive boards like the PCIe-6351For voltage amplifiers with only