using VMIC VMIPCI-5565 with acutronic 2 axis table
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we want to communicate with acutrol 3000 table using VMIC card 5565, so is there any specific command reference for each instrument or General commands are used for all instruments.
thanks
2 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 10 Jun 2011
"reflective memory" ? I do not think I have encountered that term before?
Accepted Answer
Jaime
on 13 Jun 2011
Hi Haider, I am not sure if I follow your question. The ACUTROL(r)3000 (A3K) does support the VMIC 5565 and if you have MatLab drivers for it, or you know how to write them, you can certainly communicate with the A3K with your setup. As for the protocol used, the A3K support 2 protocols via the RMI (Reflective Memory Interface): A) The ACL or ACUTROL Command Language, and B) the real time protocol. There is a reference manual for the ACL and resembles much the original IEEE488 or GPIB standard. For the Real TIme protocol, there is also a manual. This protocol is proprietary so is very unlikely that other instrument would be compatible. The ACL however has commands similar to other GPIB instruments (*idn?, *clr, etc) Let me know if this helps and if you need more assistance. J.
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More Answers (2)
Safiya
on 19 Jun 2011
1 Comment
Walter Roberson
on 21 Jun 2011
In MATLAB, the string '*idn?' would internally use 16 bit characters. The device very likely needs 8 bit characters, so you will need to use uint8('*idn?') and write that.
Jaime
on 21 Jun 2011
Mr. Roberson above is right and thanks for his response. I was unaware that internally MatLab was 16-bit chars ("wide chars" in other languages), but in terms of the ACUTROL interface I do know that it takes 8-bit chars. So thanks again for the clarification. In terms of getting the command reference manual, yes indeed it exists and you should get it from the manufacturer. Their website is www.acutronic.com and from their technical contact information the email address is service@acutronic.ch
1 Comment
Walter Roberson
on 21 Jun 2011
The documentation for char() indicates it supports code points up to 65535; the documentation about how Locale is used indicates that although MATLAB will use the current character set, code points above 65535 might not work properly.
Or you could just try
>> 0 +char(100000)
Warning: Out of range or non-integer values truncated during conversion to character.
ans =
65535
This isn't usually a problem if you are writing to a serial port as serial port output normally converts to 8 bit characters, but this would be a problem if you are using shared memory.
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