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1) How to change the to be used Interface (BT/WiFi or USB)?
No device Drivers found when installing Win 7 on USB!!!! Im installing windows 7 on a usb i got a 150 gb hard drive this is the link to my specs: HP Support document - HP Support Center I am installing it on a fresh formatted usb stick PLEASE HELP then before this happened it said: Setup was unable to create a new system partition! Here’s a quick guide on fixing the Yoga 3 USB issue by updating the Hidden Devices drivers via Device Manager: Press Windows key + R to open up a Run box. Then, type “devmgmt.msc” and hit Enter to open up Device Manager. Inside Device Manager, access the View option from the ribbon at the top and choose View Devices By Connection. Universal Medical Data provides medical ID USB drives to hold 2 GB worth of your medical information, no matter where you are. You can wear this device in the form of a medical USB bracelet or purchase engraved dog tags that are equipped to store our flash drives securely.
If you connect an USB cable to the custo cardio 300 and to your PC the custo cardio 300 changes the interface automatically to the USB port.
If you unplug the USB cable from the custo cardio 300 (or from your computer) the custo cardio 300 will change the interface automatically to BT/WiFi.
While ECG recording in BT/WiFi mode the interface will not be changed until the recording is finished.
2) USB drivers necessary for custo cardio 300?
custo cardio 300 is using the Windows integrated 'Mass Storage Device' driver. There is no need to install a special driver.
After you has plug in the USB cable to custo cardio 300 and your PC a drive letter is created and visible in Windows Explorer.
ATTENTION:
Its highly recommend to change the drive letter to an drive letter in the upper area of the alphabet. The helps to prevent drive letter changes through other devices, network drives or removable mass storage.
3) how can you update the firmware from the custo cardio 300?
in case there would be a firmware update available for the custo cardio 300 you need to download the firmware update tool from the custo med website. This download is only available behind the custo (service) partner login.
Start the custo med Firmware Update Tool. Start with pressing the 'Get new updates'button. The software will download the latest available firmware.
After the latest firmware have been downloaded, connect the custo cardio 300 with the USB cable to the computer and press 'Update custo cardio 300'.
When the software has made a connection with the custo cardio 300 the serial number and the actual firmware in the device will be displayed
If the highest firmware in the option menu Choose update version is higher than the actual version on the custo cardio 300 you can select the firmware and press 'update'
The update will approximately take one minute. When the program has been finished the following message will pop-up
To check if the firmware update have been successful you could reconnect the custo cardio 300 to the computer and the custo med Firmware update tool should show the new firmware.
The personal computer (PC), currently the standard information-processing device for office and home use, communicates with most peripherals using the universal serial bus (USB). Standardization, cost, and the availability of software and development tools have made the PC very attractive as a host-processor platform for medical and industrial applications, but the safety and reliability requirements of these growing markets—especially regarding electrical isolation—are very different from the office environment that has historically driven the design of the personal computer.
In the early days, personal computers were provided with serial and parallel ports as standard interfaces to the outside world. These legacy standards had been inherited from the earliest mainframe computers. Another available communication standard, RS-232, though slow, fit well into medical and industrial environments because it allowed easy implementation of the required robust isolation. Its low speed and point-to-point nature were tolerated because it was universally available and well supported.
USB, which has come to replace RS-232 as a standard port in personal computers and their peripherals, has features that are far superior to the older serial port in nearly every respect. It has been difficult and costly to provide the necessary isolation for medical and industrial applications, however, so USB has been principally used for diagnostic ports and temporary connections.
This article discusses various ways of applying isolation with USB. In particular, a new option, the ADuM41601 USB isolator, is now available from Analog Devices. This breakthrough product allows simple, inexpensive isolation of peripheral devices—especially including the D+ and D– lines—increasing the usefulness of USB in medical and industrial applications.
About the Universal Serial Bus (USB)
USB is the serial interface of choice for the PC. Supported by all common commercial operating systems, it enables on-the-fly connection of hardware and drivers. Up to 127 devices can exist on the same hub-and-spoke-style network. Many data transfer modes handle everything from large bulk data transfers for memory devices, to isochronous transfers for streaming media, to interrupt-driven transfers for time-critical data such as mouse movements. USB operates at three data transfer rates: low speed (1.5 Mbps), full speed (12 Mbps), and high speed (480 Mbps). When this system was created, consumer applications were emphasized; connections had to be simple and robust, with controllers and physical-layer signaling absorbing the complexity.
The USB physical layer consists of only four wires: two provide 5-V power and ground to the peripheral device; the other two, D+ and D–, form a twisted pair that can carry differential data (Figure 1). These lines can also carry single-ended data, as well as idle states that are implemented with passive resistors. When a device is attached to the bus, currents in the passive resistor configuration negotiate for speed, as well as establish a nondriven idle state. The data is organized into data frames or packets. Each frame can contain bits for clock synchronization, data type identifier, device address, data payload, and an end-of-packet sequence.
Control of this complex data structure is handled at each end of the cable by a serial interface engine (SIE). This specialized controller—or portion of a larger controller, which usually includes the USB transceiver hardware—takes care of the USB protocol. During enumeration, when a peripheral is first connected to the cable, the SIE provides the host with the configuration information and power requirements. During operation, the SIE formats all data according to the required transfer type, as well as provides error checking and automatic fault handling. The SIE handles all flow of control on the bus, enabling and disabling the line drivers and receivers as required. The host initiates all transactions, which then follow a well-defined sequence of data exchanges between host and peripheral, including provisions for when data is corrupted and other fault conditions. The SIE may be built into a microprocessor, so it may provide only the D+ and D– lines to the peripheral. Isolating this bus presents several challenges:
- Isolators are nearly always unidirectional devices, while the D+ and D– lines are bidirectional.
- The SIE does not provide an external means to determine data transmission direction.
- Isolators must be compatible with the pull-up and pull-down functions of passive resistors, making them match across the barrier.
Typical approaches to isolate the USB largely seek to sidestep the above challenges.
A first approach: Move the USB interface completely out of the device that requires isolation (Figure 2). Many devices interface generic serial buses to USB; an RS-232-to-USB interface is shown in this example. The SIE provides a generic serial-interface function; isolation is implemented in the low-speed serial lines. This approach does not capitalize on the advantages of USB, however. All that has been created is a serial port that can be loaded on-the-fly. The interface IC could be customized through firmware changes to identify the peripheral, allowing a custom driver to be created; but each peripheral would require a custom adaptor. Unless the adaptor was permanently affixed to the peripheral, it would be a servicing nightmare. In addition, the speed of the interface would be limited to that of standard RS-232—not close to the throughput of even low-speed USB.
A second approach: Use a standalone SIE that has an easily isolated interface (Figure 3). Several products on the market use fast unidirectional interfaces, such as SPI, to connect an SIE to a microprocessor. Digital isolators, such as the ADuM1401C four-channel digital isolator, will allow full isolation of an SPI bus. The SIE contains buffer memory that can be filled by the SPI bus, so the operating speed of the SPI can be largely independent of the speed of the USB. The SIE will negotiate with the USB host for its highest possible connection speed and will dispense data at the negotiated bus speed until it runs out of buffered data. The SIE will then tell the host to retry if more data is expected, allowing time for the SPI interface to refill the buffers for another transfer cycle. Though very effective, this scheme usually requires modifications to peripheral drivers, as well as bypassing existing USB facilities built into the peripheral’s microprocessor. This solution is expensive in terms of components and board space.
A third approach: If the microprocessor’s SIE uses an external transceiver, the data and control lines to the transceiver can be isolated (Figure 4). But USB requires as many as nine unidirectional data lines between an SIE and its transceiver. This represents a significant expense in high-speed digital isolators. In addition, the fastest available digital isolator works at about 150 Mbps. Though much faster than low- and full-speed USB, it can’t handle high-speed data, limiting the speed range of the USB interface. This solution is fully compatible with the USB drivers provided for the microprocessor’s SIE, lowering development costs, but the many isolation channels required make it expensive to implement. Market trends toward increased integration will obsolete this type of transceiver interface.
A fourth approach: Insert the isolation directly into the D+ and D– lines (Figure 5). This allows D+/D– isolation to be added to existing USB applications without rewriting drivers or adding a redundant SIE, a significant advantage over the other approaches. Isolating the D+ and D– lines complicates the situation, however, as the device must be able to handle flow of control like an SIE, as well as permit application of pull-up resistors and speed determination across its isolation barrier. It should also operate without calling for the overhead of additional device drivers.
These challenges have been met with the ADuM4160 USB isolator (Figure 6), a new chip-scale device that supports direct isolation of low- and full-speed USB D+ and D– lines.
Analog Devices iCoupler® technology3 is particularly well-suited to construction of a USB isolator. The primary challenges in developing a USB isolator are properly determining the direction of data transmission—and when to disable drivers to allow an idle bus state. The packet-oriented nature of USB data allows a simple method of determining data direction without the overhead of a complete SIE. When the bus is idle, pull-up and pull-down resistors hold the USB in an idle state with no buffers driving the bus.
The ADuM4160 monitors the upstream and downstream segments of the bus, waiting for a transition from either direction. When a transition is detected, it is encoded and transmitted across the barrier. The data is decoded, and the output drivers are enabled to transmit on the other cable segment. From this first transition, the direction of data flow is identified, and the reverse-direction isolation channels are disabled. The isolator continues to transmit data in the same direction as long as data continues to be received. When the USB packet is complete, special data, the end-of-packet (EOP) sequence, is transmitted. The EOP contains a nondifferential signal that should not be included in any data structure. The isolator can distinguish an EOP marker from valid data. This signals that the bus should be returned to the idle state. The output drivers are disabled, and the isolator begins to monitor its upstream and downstream inputs for the next transition—which will set the next direction for data transmission.
In addition, watchdog timers return the isolator to its idle state when a bus error occurs. The ADuM4160 takes advantage of the transition-based isolation scheme, one of the core capabilities of iCoupler technology.
The isolator must also provide support for pull-up and pull-down resistors. Each side of the isolator supports an independent USB bus segment, with all of the bias resistors present in the idle state. The pull-up resistor signals that a new device on the bus needs to go through the initialization sequence, called enumeration. Knowing the operating speed of the peripheral and the time when the pull-up should be connected allows enumeration to begin in a controlled manner. Several factors can affect the status of the upstream pull-up resistor. Different combinations of available upstream and downstream power-supply voltage are possible. The isolator is designed to give predictable operation in all specified combinations of available power. A peripheral would want to delay application of the upstream pull-up resistor at times—if it needs to complete its own local initialization prior to starting the USB enumeration, for example. The ADuM4160 provides a control pin on the downstream side of the part to allow the peripheral to determine when enumeration occurs.
Other features available in the device include the ability to run from either a 5-V or 3.3-V power source. So only one power supply is required in the peripheral; it can be either voltage. The ADuM4160 has also been designed with rugged ESD protection to allow hot plugging of D+ and D– pins to connectors without external protective circuitry in most cases.
The ADuM4160 will likely be used in one of three ways:
- It will be installed in a peripheral to isolate its upstream port. The ADuM4160 was designed with this configuration as the base application. It leads to the simplest power and control configurations (Figure 7).
- It can be used to isolate a hub and therefore all of the peripherals downstream of the hub (Figure 8).
- It can be used in an isolated cable configuration (Figure 9).
The following illustrations show how the ADuM4160 will be connected in each of these applications.
In the peripheral application (Figure 7), where the peripheral has its own source of power, almost no power is required from the USB cable—about 10 mW to run the isolator’s upstream side and the pull-up resistor. Since the peripheral operates at a single speed, the isolator is hardwired for the desired speed setting, either full speed or low speed. If the peripheral port happens to be high-speed-capable, then it sends a high-speed “chirp” pattern during enumeration. This would normally initiate negotiations for high-speed operation, but the ADuM4160 blocks the chirp signal and automatically forces the high-speed peripheral to operate at full speed. For low-power peripherals that don’t have their own supply, an isolated dc-to-dc converter, such as the ADuM5000, can be used to supply the peripheral and the ADuM4160, drawing power from the USB cable.
Used as a hub isolator (Figure 8), the ADuM4160 treats the hub as its peripheral. The ADuM4160 is set to full speed; the rest of the application is similar to the standard peripheral case discussed above. The hub will be forced to operate at full speed by the isolator’s intervention in its chirp function. The hub IC will allow connection to combinations of low- and full-speed devices, even though the isolator runs at a fixed speed. The hub provides power to the isolator’s downstream port, and enumeration can begin either at power-up or on a delayed basis. The hub usually requires more power than can be supplied by the upstream cable via an isolated dc-to-dc converter.
Driving an isolated USB cable (Figure 9) requires use of a dc-to-dc converter to supply power to the downstream port and cable. To satisfy the requirements of the USB specification, the downstream segment of the cable must provide 5-V power to the pull-up of the peripheral device. An isolated dc-to-dc converter, such as the ADuM5000, can provide this power with enough left over to provide power for downstream devices with low power requirements. Figure 9 shows the use of an ADuM5000 isoPower® device.3 In this application, the hard-wired speed pins of the ADuM4160 become somewhat inconvenient. The cable will only operate at one USB speed at a time; it must be rewired to switch speed modes, either manually, by simple switches, or with more elaborate circuits, depending on the end-user’s requirements.
Conclusion
USB is here to stay. The ADuM4160, a breakthrough isolation product, will allow simple and inexpensive isolation of peripheral devices in USB applications. This, in turn, will increase the penetration of USB into the medical and industrial application space well beyond diagnostic ports and temporary connections. The ADuM4160’s focus on providing isolation in the D+/D– lines makes implementation extremely simple. Support for both full-speed and low-speed operation provides sufficient bandwidth for a wide range of applications.
References
1Information on all ADI components can be found at www.analog.com.
2www.analog.com/en/products/interface-isolation/isolation/standard-digital-isolators.html.
Drivers Custo Med Usb Devices Wireless Adapter
3www.analog.com/en/products/interface-isolation/isolation/isopower.html.