Thu, 10 Nov 2022 15:31:26 +0100
Add a mastodon back url in the credits footer
========================================== HP 34970A Data Acquisition Unit - part 3 ========================================== :Author: David Douard :Category: Electronics :Tags: HP, 34970A, HP34970A, DMM, repair, test equipment :series: HP 34970A repair :series_index: 3 As explained in `the previous post in this series <{filename}/hp34970a_2.rst>`_, I've started to sniff the serial protocol between the main board and the display panel so I can replace the failed VFD by an OLED or TFT display managed by an arduino or similar. Protocol ======== The serial communication takes place at a rather unusual speed: 187500 bit/s, otherwise, a 8E1 scheme (with even parity bit). The protocol consist in a transmission frame with a start of transmission handcheck, some commands with arguments, and an end of transmission packet. Each transmitted character is acknowledged by the receiver, either by a ``<0x99>`` (for the initial handcheck) or by a ``<0x00>`` for the other ones.. I've only probed the CPU->DP communications. I don't really care the other way fr now since I plan to keep the original 80C51 so it manages this protocol and handle the keyboard. In the direction CPU->DP, we can find: - ``<0x66>``: start of transmission, must be acknowledged by a ``<0x99>`` by the receiver; this start of transmission is then followed by a "command": - ``<CMD> <NCHAR> <CHAR1> ... <CHARN>``: the command byte is followed by the numer of characters sent as argument, then the characters themselves. - ``<0x55>``: end of transmission. I've only identified 3 commands for now, but these are the most important ones: - ``0x00``: send the chars to the main display - ``0x0C``: send the chars to the secondary channel display - ``0x0A``: set the display indicators Main display ------------ Characters are simply sent to the display. However, to specify that a part of the string to display should be less bright (usually, the selected option is bright and the other ones are dim), the CPU insert a special character (need to check which hexadecimal value it is) at the beginning and the end of the dim part of the string. Channel display --------------- Seems there is nothing special there. The frame payload always consist in 3 characters (the 3 digits). Indicator flags --------------- The indicator flags are always sent as 4 bytes, each bit controlling one indicator. The indicator flags I've been able to identify so far are below (please see `this page <{filename}/hp34970a_protocol.rst>`_ for the complete protocol description). Let's say the frame is: ``<0x0A> <0x04> <F1> <F2> <F3> <F4>``, then: - F1.8 = - F1.7 = HI - F1.6 = Alarm - F1.5 = LO - F1.4 = Channels - F1.3 = Channels box - F1.2 = Mx+B enabled - F1.1 = Alarm enabled (or the alarm frame) - F2.5 = 4W - F2.4 = Alarm 1 ? - F2.3 = Alarm 3 - F2.2 = Alarm 4 - F2.1 = Alarm 2 - F3.6 = - F3.5 = - F4.8 = - F4.7 = CONFIG (not sure) - F4.6 = - F4.5 = MON - F4.4 = VIEW - F4.3 = - F4.2 = - F4.1 = Quick prototype =============== With this very incomplete reverse ingeeniring of the communication, I have enough meat to try a quick prototype. I've used an Arduino Uno and a cheap 3.2" TFT color display. As I wanted to have my serial protocol to debug the code for the beginning, I've used the SoftwareSerial_ library for this prototype. The result is this beautiful clean setup: .. image:: {static}/images/hp34970a/poc_display.jpg :alt: A very quick proof of concept of an arduino based display replacement for the HP34970A. As you can see, it works: I have the main content od the VFD display on my TFT module! .. image:: {static}/images/hp34970a/poc_display_mux_off.jpg :alt: The FTF display showing the main area and the current channel area. .. image:: {static}/images/hp34970a/poc_display_vdc.jpg :alt: The same with the channel 209 configured as VDC, 6.5digits. The job is far from finished however: I still have to figure out how the "annotation" flags are encoded and display them, and most importantly, I have it make it work with the hardwre USART of the mega328. This seems to mbe necessary because I have glitches sometimes. But I'm very happy it worked almost at my first try. I was quite surprised since the baudrate is above the maximum officially supported one (115200). I'll release the code of the prototype any time soon. .. _SoftwareSerial: https://www.arduino.cc/en/Reference/SoftwareSerial