I must admit, I don't quite understand the use case. Isn't this solved with any storage oscilloscope (or sufficiently fast data acquisition system) using single shot, triggered on either signal? Isn't this (one of) the reasons why a great number of stored samples is desirable?
A digital storage oscilloscope can do that but alternate triggering allows both waveforms to be stably displayed in real time with the trigger in phase with each waveform separately even if the waveforms are asynchronous with each other.
Examples include viewing the switching or ripple of two separate unsynchronized switching regulators at the same time. Or viewing a switching regulator waveform and a separately clocked logic signal.
well, alternate is pretty straightforward: alternates between two [...]
between two what? There is the confusion.
Alternate trigger means that when alternate instead of chop is used in dual trace mode and the trigger source is set to vertical, the trigger source follows which trace is currently being displayed. This was an possibly unintended but useful consequence of early oscilloscope designs where the vertical trigger source selection meant literally that; the trigger source was taken from the vertical signal *after* the vertical channel switch. Even earlier designs may have *only* had vertical triggering so always operated in alternate trigger mode. Later designs like the 7000 series emulated this behavior because it was a useful feature.
Alternate sweep means that in dual trace mode, the A sweep and A trigger display one trace and the B sweep and B trigger display the second trace. The oldest oscilloscope that I know of which can do this is the Tektronix 547. This mode emulates a true dual beam oscilloscope with separate sweeps and triggers but requires only one beam.
Alternate delayed sweep is something else which displays the same set of signals with two different sweeps. This is the famous mode where one sweep shows an intensified zone while the second sweep shows the contents of the intensified zone effectively magnifying that part of the slower sweep. Early delayed sweep oscilloscopes could display one sweep or the other but not both alternately. Sometimes alternate delayed sweep can be used to emulate alternate sweep.
In my case i think at alt trigger as it's implemented in my tek 7000 mainframe, which is one of the following:
- Trigger from and show only channel a or b, alternatively. trigger is the same, source is different
- Trigger from and show only channel a or b, alternatively. different trigger settings.
- Trigger from the same channel, different trigger settings.
Option 1 is what i'd need.. and i think it's perfectly doable with a DSO but i didn't know many that implemented this function
The Tektronix 7000 series has unusually flexible triggering and alternate triggering in the traditional sense was deliberately included on multiple levels. The mainframe can alternately trigger between vertical plug-ins and dual input vertical plug-ins can also alternately trigger between inputs.
The 7000 series also support alternate sweep with the same signals displayed with different sweeps and triggers and alternate pairs with different signals displayed with different sweeps and triggers. The dual beam 7844 (and the older dual beam 555 and dual beam 556?) took these capabilities to an extreme.
As pointed out by other posters, some modern DSOs support alternate triggering. My old 22xx series DSOs which use analog triggering support alternate triggering simply because the original analog trigger design did also.