Datasheet
Application Note
www.tektronix.com/bench2
Setting Digital Thresholds 
A mixed signal oscilloscope’s digital channels view a digital 
signal as either a logic high or logic low, just like a digital circuit 
views the signal. This means as long as ringing, overshoot and 
ground bounce do not cause logic transitions, these analog 
characteristics are not of concern to the MSO. Just like a logic 
analyzer, an MSO uses a threshold voltage to determine if the 
signal is logic high or logic low. 
The MSO5000B, MSO4000B and MDO4000B Series provides 
per-channel threshold settings that are useful in debugging 
circuits with mixed logic families. Figure 1 shows the 
MSO4000B measuring five logic signals on one of its digital 
probe pods. Three TTL (Transistor-Transistor Logic) signals 
and two LVPECL (Low-Voltage Positive Emitter-Coupled Logic) 
signals are measured at the same time. 
For the MSO2000B and MDO3000 Series, the thresholds 
are adjusted per probe pod (a grouping of 8 channels) and 
therefore, the TTL signals would be on one pod while the 
LVPECL signals would be on the second pod. 
Timing and State Acquisitions
There are two major digital acquisition techniques. The first 
technique is timing acquisition in which the MSO samples 
the digital signal at uniformly spaced times determined by the 
MSO’s sample rate. At each sample point, the MSO stores the 
signal’s logic state and creates a timing diagram of the signal. 
The second digital acquisition technique is state acquisition. 
State acquisition defines special times that the digital signal’s 
logic state is valid and stable. This is common in synchronous 
and clocked digital circuits. A clock signal defines the time 
when the signal state is valid. For example, the input signal 
stable time is around the rising clock edge for a D-Flip-Flop 
with rising edge clocking. The output signal stable time is 
around the falling clock edge for a D-Flip-Flop with rising edge 
clocking. Since the clock period of a synchronous circuit may 
not be fixed, the time between state acquisitions may not be 
uniform as it is in a timing acquisition.
Logic analyzers provide both timing and state acquisitions. 
A mixed signal oscilloscope’s digital channels acquire signals 
similar to how a logic analyzer acquires signals in timing 
acquisition mode, as seen in Figure 2. The Tektronix MSO 
Series decodes the timing acquisition into a clocked bus 
display (Figure 2) and event table (Figure 3) which is similar to 
the logic analyzer’s state acquisition display, providing you with 
important information during debug. 
Figure 1. Mixed logic families (TTL & LVPECL) threshold settings on the same 
MSO4000B digital probe pod. The top three channels are TTL signals with a threshold 
of 1.40 V and the bottom two channels are LVPECL signals with a threshold of 
2.00 V.
Figure 2. Example of a timing acquisition on the MSO Series. Four parallel buses have 
been defined and decoded using the device’s clock signal.










