This guy seems to think AC trigger coupling is a good thing:
That video is deceptive in a couple of senses. He briefly mentions the fact that digital oscilloscopes perform their triggering on the digital datastream, but completely fails to point out that that means that the triggering circuitry can
only see the AC-coupled signal if AC
channel coupling is selected. That means that if you have AC channel coupling selected, it is
bad to also select AC trigger coupling because it has virtually no effect; the input signal to the triggering "circuitry"/VHDL code is already AC triggered at that point.
Secondly, given the fact the digital (not to mention many analog) scopes default to an auto trigger that will show you the range of the signal while it is untriggered instead of displaying a dead blank screen, there's a bunch of new, mostly-digital-specific different options available for dealing with signals with an unknown DC bias:
- 50% trigger button
- AC channel coupling (which, uniquely on a digital oscilloscope, provides all the benefits of AC trigger coupling and more)
- Or crikey, since the trigger level is visible as a line on the screen, is it
really that bad to just take the fraction of a signal to twist the knob the right way? I dunno, after taking all the time to probe the circuit, set the vertical gains and offsets, timebase etc, it's just never bothered me.
And how often is the average designer encountering systems with signals at 4 different voltage offsets? Not me, being the digital types most of the signals I've looked at over the past year have been 3V3 and 5V digital stuff, and not a lot of other people I suspect. It's good to be aware of the option, but I totally fail to be convinced that AC triggering is genuinely frequently useful to the average designer doing typical stuff. And it's really important to point out that AC channel coupling provides a lot of these features in digital scopes, where AC trigger coupling used to be required. And it's harder to wade through the menus on the digital scope to find the trigger coupling settings, so it's actually quite a good thing that this is the case. I will cut myself off here, but I think this video would look very different if it were done by someone born and raised with modern digital scopes, rather than insisting to a fault that analog scopes are the gold standard of ideal behaviour.