Sierra Video MADI-XX User Manual

SIERRA VIDEO
Sierra View MADI-XX
User’s Manual
SIERRA VIEW MADI-XX
User’s Manual
Sierra Video
P.O. Box 2462 Grass Valley, CA 95945
Tel: (530) 478-1000
Fax: (530) 478-1105
Email: info@sierravideo.com
Version 2.0
Publication Date: February 2012
The information contained in this manual is subject to change by Sierra Video
Table of Contents
Introduction 1
MADI-xx Expansion Slots 2 Powerful alarms 3 Remote control, monitoring and configuration scheduling 4 Main features 5 The on-screen display 6 Bargraph scales 7 Alarm indicators 8 Network requirements 8 Level and alarm streams 8 Audio streaming 9
Operation 11
Operating modes 11
Normal mode 11 Menu mode 11
Control button summary 12
Menu Commands 13
Menu Navigation 13 Scales – analog and digital scale types, reference value and colors 13
Bargraph scales 14 Analog and digital scale references 14
Level Bars – bar and label settings 15
Meter Rows 16 Ranges and colors 16 Bar labels 16 Peak hold indicators 16 Bar width, position and spacing 16
Analog and digital groups 17 Phase Bars – phase bar and multi-indicator settings 18
Phase bar settings 18
Multi-indicators 18 Alarms configuration 19
Alarms 20
Anti-phase alarm 20
Resetting alarms 20
Using ALARM-xx frames 20
Network Settings 20 System – user config, IP settings, matrix setup, audio mon, screen resolution 21
User configuration 22
Network Settings 22
Matrix setup 23
Using the on-screen matrix mimic 23 Audio monitor assign 24 Audio network stream 24
Screen resolution 24
Align monitor size/position 24
About – Firmware and installed cards 25
Firmware 25
Input card type 25
Installation 27
Power and fuses 27
Health and safety considerations 28
Disposal 28 Input card configurations 29 Connector I/O 29 Removing the top cover 29 Serial port assignments 30 Audio I/O connector pin assignments 31
Supplied accessories 33
Options 33
Upgrading firmware 34
Using SOFT-xx 35 CONFIG-xx 36 DISPLAY-xx 36
Installation Guide 38
System requirements 38 Initial Setup 39
Troubleshooting 41
Sample problems and their solutions 41
Specifications 45
Warranty 47
Contents - 1
Introduction
The Sierra View MADI-xx is a 128 x 128 channel MADI router with integral multi-channel
audio metering and signal fault alarms for up to 128 channels.
Chapter
1
It is designed for live sound theatres, concert halls, radio and TV and is supplied as a 1U
rack mounting frame.
1
MADI-xx Expansion Slots
It has two slots for optional external audio expansion using 32 channel analog or AES/EBU I/O cards. When fully expanded, the total usable matrix size is 192 x 128 (two I/P cards), 128 x 192 (2 O/P cards) or 160x160 (1 I/P card and 1 O/P card). Any of the MADI inputs or analog or AES/EBU inputs or outputs (on a fully equipped frame) can be converted to any of the three supported formats. In addition, the MADI stream can be tapped into to break out up to 16 pairs of analog or AES/EBU audio for external processing. The processed audio can then be fed back into the
MADI stream.
All audio level and alarm data can be viewed on a local display and streamed via a TCP/IP
network for remote visual monitoring.
2
Monitored parameters include audio level, audio-loss, carrier-loss (when using AES/EBU inputs) over-level and sustained anti-phase between assigned channel p airs. Six industry standard audio meter types are supported and each meter can have its own range colors, break points and reference level and a choice of peak hold and phase correlation functions.
MADI-XX
An on-screen menu provides access to all parameters.
Up to four pairs of audio channels can be selected for audible monitoring. These can be stre amed over the TCP/IP network and are available in both analog and AES/EBU format via an optional monitor output card.
Pow erful alarms
Alarm settings and thresholds can be set independently for each channel or pair of channels. This allows different alarm configurations for different programming such as pop, classical music, news, sport, movies and drama. Not only does this significantly reduce the occurrence of false alarms, but the entire gamut of MADI-xx settings, including alarm settings, meter types and colors, can be scheduled to change over a 24 hour period using optional SOFT -xx PC software.
3
Remote control, monitoring and configuration scheduling
Although the MADI-xx is designed to be used as a stand-alone monitor it may also be used with control and monitoring software to monitor and configure multiple units over a network. The optional Windows PC software (SOFT-xx) provides multiple frame integration, automated control, event logging, configuration scheduling, real time diagnostics and unlimited user setups. It also acts as a desktop meter bridge by rendering analog and digital audio meters and alarms to screen for multiple frames. Channels can be named for ease of use and associated with alarms and analog or digital met ers as required. Other optional networked monitor accessories are available to further enhance the monitoring of multiple audio streams in multi-channel control rooms. For example, the ALARMS-xx remote alarm reads up to 32 channels of alarm data from a
single MADI-xx or AM-xx frame.
The unit has front panel LED indicators which show each type of alarm condition for each channel. ALARM-xx units may be easily cascaded to monitor more channels. REMOTE-xx is a 1U hard wired remote control panel which replicates the front panel keys to allow MADI-xx or AM-xx to be mounted away from the main operational position. Both REMOTE-xx and ALARMS-xx can be connected via LAN or RS422. Audio level and alarm data may also be distributed over a LAN to other devices that can render audio meter bargraphs and alarm status information to screen and the protocol used is availab le by request. Available accessories include audio input breakout cables for converting from XLRs (or
BNCs in the case of unbalanced AES/EBU) to 25 way and 37 way D connectors.
4
MADI-XX
Main features
92x192 router allows any input to be switched to any output  2 x Coaxial & 2 x Optical 64 channel MADI interfaces for 128 MADI channels  Optional external 32 channel audio I/O interface cards  Optional SOFT-XX control, source/bar labeling, monitoring and configuration scheduling
software for use with multiple units over LAN
DVI-I graphical output for audio metering and system menu  Optional audible monitor output card for 4 analog and digital pairs from any source  Audio streaming for up to 4 channel pairs via TCP/IP  DIN PPM, BBC PPM, NORDIC PPM, VU, VU EXTENDED, AES/EBU scale types each
with their own ballistics, range colors, break points and level reference
On-screen bargraphs may be grouped according to signal type or manually assigned to
sources irrespective of signal format
Sources can be named with up to 16 alpha-numeric characters  Per channel alarms for audio carrier loss, over and under level & anti-phase  Phase bar assignable to any channel pair  On-screen menu for unit configuration  1U rack-mountable  Keyboard socket for custom labels  Works with optional dedicated hardware monitoring units  Available accessories include audio I/P breakout cables to XLR / BNC
5
The on-screen display
The MADI-xx meter/alarm display provides a visual status display of up to 128 channels in two rows of 64 channels each. Each row can be assigned to display MADI input 1 or 2, or the input External bus. If the second row is set to Off, the first row is rescaled to fill the screen.
The MADI-xx Meter/Alarm Display – default colors and break points
Break points and colors used for the upper and lower ranges of each bar type can be customized to satisfy any in-house monitoring style for each of the six scale types.
6
MADI-XX
Bargraph scales
The following audio scales are supported:
Note: Each bar type can have different range colors, break points and level refe rence.
Where optional external audio cards are installed and preferences for different scale types has been detected, external channels are placed automatically into two groups according to signal type. This is dealt with in detail in the Analog and digital groups section in the Operation chapter.
7
Alarm indicators
Flashing mini-alarms can be assigned to the bargraphs for under-level, over-level, anti-phase and no-carrier (AES only). The colors used are as follows:
Audio Loss: Yellow – position (left or right) indicates channel Audio Over: Red – position (left or right) indicates channel Anti-Phase: Cyan – middle alarm Carrier Loss: White – middle alarm
If carrier loss occurs only that alarm will flash, unless audio loss had already been active for
the same channel. Note: There are also mini-phase bars which can be turned on for each bar. The colors for in-phase and
out-of-phase are customizable.
Network requirements
There are many ways networks can be configured and a hard and fast rule is hard to make as both latency and bandwidth will affect operation. Bandwidth requirements can be calculated from are the sum of the alarm and level data together with any streamed audio monitoring feeds. A MADI-xx frame being monitored by SOFT-xx will require up to 455kbps at startup assuming one monitoring application and no streamed audio. Further monitoring applications will require up to 370kbps each. Streamed audio bandwidth is dependent on monitoring audio quality and the number of stere o pairs being monitored. Full bandwidth quality requires 1.6Mbps for each stereo pair so the maximum bandwidth needed for four stereo pairs would be 6.4 Mbps. This figure must be added to the bandwidth needed for all of the Monitoring applications expected to be active at one time. The next section discusses bandwidth requirements in more detail:
Lev el and alarm streams
Level and alarm streams use unicasting for every monitoring session invoked.
When the SOFT-xx starts it will establish one stream for a connected MADI-xx frame at 455kbps, which is the sum of the two streams. The alarm only stream is used for logging in the configuration application (CONFIG-xx) and the other stream is used for a single monitoring application (DISPLAY-xx). Each monitoring station requires a stream at 370kbps for level and alarm data.
8
MADI-XX
Audio streaming
Audio streaming bandwidth is directly proportional to the number of audio pairs streamed and the quality levels used:
Network bit-rate does not change when multiple stations are listening to the same stream since multicasting is used for each stereo pair.
9
Operation
The front panel user interface consists of 6 buttons. The functions assigned to control buttons depend on the mode selected.
Chapter
2
Operating modes
Normal or ‘locked’ mode is the normal operating mode. Configuration or ‘menu’ mode provides access to configuration menus.
Normal mode
In normal use, the configuration menu will be locked to prevent inadvertent operation and configuration menus are not available. The main ‘normal’ mode controls are as follows:
Select Parameter buttons move channel-select cursor to select phase bar s ource Lock button resets the peak hold indicators when pressed briefly Lock button enters ‘menu’ mode when held down for about three seconds
Menu mode
To enter menu mode from normal mode (with the red Lock LED off) hold the Lock button down for about 3 seconds. The configuration or ‘menu’ mode will be entered, on-screen menus will appear and the red Lock LED will illuminate. If the Lock button is held down again, any changed settings will be saved and the MADI-XX will return to normal meter mode. The menu mode will return to the last menu item visited provided the unit has not been reset or switched off since a configuration menu was last accessed.
The main ‘menu’ mode controls are as follows:
Function scrolls menu cursor up and down to select function  Select Parameter keys (<>) select s set tings to apply to chosen parameter; also selects
main menu when menu name is highlighted
Insert On + Select Parameter (INS + <>) selects main menu page  Insert On + Lock confirms action in some menus  Lock button leaves ‘menu’ mode and saves settings when held down for about three
seconds
11
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