Grass-valley CRSC v.3.2 Manuel d'utilisateur

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Page 1 - User’s Guide

CRSCCompact Router System Con guratorUser’s GuideUG0032-072 Dec 2014

Page 2 - Terms and Conditions

xTable of Contents9 Locks Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99Summary . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 3 - Change History

88Router Crosspoints PageUsing the Crosspoints PageIf you attempt to switch an even input or an even output, you will see a message similar to the fol

Page 4 - WARNING

89CRSCUser’s GuideThe shortcut creates a diagonal take across the entire crosspoint matrix. That is, input n is connected to output n for all n. To pe

Page 5 - General Warnings

90Router Crosspoints PageUsing the Crosspoints PageCRSC displays a warning message: Click Ye s to perform the take or click No to cancel the take. The

Page 6 - General Cautions

91Firmware Updates PageSummaryThe ‘Firmware Updates’ page lets you upload firmware to selected devices and reset selected devices: The upper part of

Page 7

92Firmware Updates PageSummaryPage FeaturesDevice TableThe columns in the table of devices present the following options and information:Selection Opt

Page 8

93CRSCUser’s GuideFunction ButtonsAmong the function buttons is ‘Refresh List’. Click this button at any time to be sure that you are viewing the most

Page 9

94Firmware Updates PageSummaryIf you click the ‘Stop Update’ button while an update is running, CRSC presents a confirmation message: Click Ye s if yo

Page 10 - Table of Contents

95CRSCUser’s GuideUsing the PageHow to Update Firmware1 Go to the ‘Firmware Updates’ page.2 Select individual compact routers or remote panel modules

Page 11

96Firmware Updates PageUsing the Page6 When the firmware update completes, it displays a status report: Fig. 8-2: Sample Firmware Status ReportClick S

Page 12

97CRSCUser’s GuideHow to View Past Update ReportsTo display all update status messages, click ‘View Past Update Logs’. The button is initially disable

Page 13 - Introduction

xiCRSCUser’s GuideThe Routers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 14

98Firmware Updates PageUsing the Page

Page 15

99Locks PageSummaryThe ‘Lock Maintenance’ page let you view all locks, and to clear selected locks: You can use this page to clear locks that cannot

Page 16 - CQX Networks

100Locks PageUsing the Lock Maintenance PageUsing the Lock Maintenance PageLocks are listed for each output that is locked, not for each level nor for

Page 17 - CRSC Summary

101CRSCUser’s GuideTo change the ordering of the table, click any column header once for ascending order; click the column header again for descending

Page 18 - CRSC User Interface

102Locks PageUsing the Lock Maintenance Page

Page 19 - • Quick Start Guide

103NV9000 Remote Panel Settings PageSummaryClick ‘Setup NV9000 Remote Panels’ in the navigation page to access the ‘NV9000 Remote Panel Settings’ pag

Page 20

104NV9000 Remote Panel Settings PageSummaryPage FeaturesIn the middle of the page is ‘Network Frame Summary’ in which there are 3 tabbed pages. Use th

Page 21 - Creating a CRSC Network

105CRSCUser’s GuideUsing the PageHow to Convert a Remote Panel Module1 Go to the ‘NV9000 Remote Panel Settings’ page.2 In the ‘Remote Panel’ tab, clic

Page 22 - Rotary Switches

106NV9000 Remote Panel Settings PageUsing the Page

Page 23

107TutorialsAppendix A provides a conceptual background regarding CR Series products and CRSC. TopicsRouting Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 24 - Usage Tips

xiiTable of ContentsPerforming Locks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 25 - System Design

108TutorialsRouting OverviewWhat is a Router?Suppose you have two VCRs and one TV. You want to be able to view a movie from either VCR. So you plug th

Page 26

109CRSCUser’s GuideInside the RouterIn concept, at least, a router contains an array of wires. (Physically, it might be different.) Fig. A-1: A rudime

Page 27

110TutorialsRouting OverviewSignalsMany signal sources (and receivers) have several signal types. In the CR Series, routers can switch one or more sig

Page 28 - Installing CRSC

111CRSCUser’s GuideAES ‘takes’ in a “mono” partition are not paired. Each AES channel is independent. The 16×16 router has 32 independent inputs and 3

Page 29

112TutorialsRemote Panel Operating ModesRouter ControlLarge routers usually require large router control systems (such as Grass Valley’s NV9000).A CRS

Page 30

113CRSCUser’s GuideEnhanced ModeLevel selection is applicable to breakaway and only to breakaway. Level selection governs the selection of sources for

Page 31

114TutorialsCablingerrors should take only a small fraction of a second to execute. Under normal conditions, a typical salvo executes in a few millise

Page 32 - Installation Testing

115CRSCUser’s GuideCustomers who want to operate the router through an automation system may contact Grass Valley technical support for information. D

Page 33 - Getting Started

116TutorialsCablingYour decisions will be based in part on the button layouts of the control panels you have in your system. Keep in mind that salvos

Page 34

117CRSCUser’s GuideAES in = 32, AES out = 11 (6 AES 1/2 to the VTRs, 3 Dolby + 1 stereo to the D/A, 1 “DDD”)AA in = 3 mic + 1 silence), AA out = 1 (mi

Page 35 - NVISION Series Products Page

1IntroductionChapter 1 provides concepts and definitions that are needed to understand CRSC — the Compact Router System Configurator.Please refer to

Page 36

118TutorialsCabling(So we could have that additional HD/SD level split if it desired. Could also add another AES level if desired.)Here’s the resultin

Page 37 - Ethernet Settings Page

119CRSCUser’s GuidePlease refer to the Cabling Diagram on page 119.Operational ConsiderationsYou can view HD sources on the HD monitor and SD sources

Page 38 - Buttons

120TutorialsCablingFig. A-2: Cabling DiagramSourceDest12345678910111213141516OUTPUTSINPUTS1-89-16INPUTS17-2425-321234567812345678INOUT9 10111213141516

Page 39

121CRSCUser’s GuideProductsThe CR Series includes a wide variety of routers and panels. This section provides an overview of all CR Series products. F

Page 40

122TutorialsProductsThese are the 2RU compact routers and matching control panels: The CP3201 (a 1 RU panel) is special case not listed in the tables

Page 41 - Router Levels Page

123CRSCUser’s GuideCQX RoutersEach of the 3 CQX (“clean and quiet”) routers routes any of 16 inputs to 2 “clean and quiet” outputs or to 6 auxiliary (

Page 42

124TutorialsProductsUsageThere are several different ways to use compact routers:• A single stand-alone router with a “captive” control panel or with

Page 43 - Using the Router Levels Page

125CRSCUser’s GuideCRSC OperationA CRSC network has the same topology as a stand-alone network, except (1) the routers and remote panel modules have b

Page 44 - How to Update a Level

126TutorialsProductsAt present there is little to configure other than the IP address of the router or the remote panel module. (You must also specify

Page 45 - How to Add a Level

127CRSCUser’s GuideFig. A-9: Front View of the CR3232-HD Digital Video RouterFig. A-10: Front View of the CR6400 Digital Router Fig. A-11: Rear View o

Page 46 - How to Delete a Level

2IntroductionHardware SummaryRoutersWith the exception of the machine control routers, all the compact routers are X/Y routers having n × m crosspoint

Page 47

128TutorialsProductsFig. A-15: Rear View of the CR3232-AA Analog Audio Router Fig. A-16: Rear View of the CR16-PR Machine Control Router Fig. A-17: Re

Page 48

129CRSCUser’s GuideAll routers except machine control routers accept these video reference rates: The machine control routers do not receive video ref

Page 49 - Machine Control Routers Page

130TutorialsProductsHD Video Routers All of the “HD” routers are SWB (super wide band) routers: they support a wide range of SD and HD bit rates and f

Page 50

131CRSCUser’s GuideFigure A-20 shows a simplified view of the CQX digital video router: Fig. A-21: Block Diagram of the CQX Digital Video RouterThe vi

Page 51 - Master or Slave

132TutorialsProductsCustomers should have no reason to remove the fan unit. The CQX video routers have a “mode” switch in addition to the 16-position

Page 52

133CRSCUser’s GuideDigital Audio Routers  This information does not apply to the CR6464-AES. Please refer to the CR6400 Family User’s Guide for detai

Page 53

134TutorialsProducts• Asynchronous mode.The router passes the input stream (32kHz–192kHz) transparently to the output with no audio processing. The ou

Page 54 - How to Change a Port Type

135CRSCUser’s GuideThe 1RU machine control router has 16 bidirectional serial ports (RJ-45). The 2RU machine control router has 32. Figure A-26 shows

Page 55 - Remote Panels Page

136TutorialsProductsThe 5 port types are variations of “controlled” or “controlling”: Controlling or ControlledThese port settings fix the direction o

Page 56 - Page Layout

137CRSCUser’s GuideIn a CRSC network, all buttons except the lock buttons (shown) are configurable. In an NV9000 system, all buttons are configurable,

Page 57 - Configuration Options

3CRSCUser’s GuideUsageThere are several ways to use CRSC (Compact Router System Configurator): • A single stand-alone router with a “captive” control

Page 58 - Essential Information

138TutorialsProductsIn stand-alone systems, a CP3232 has 32 source selection buttons, 32 destination selection buttons, the 2 lock buttons shown, and

Page 59 - Remote Panel Modes

139CRSCUser’s GuideFig. A-32: Rear View of the RP16 Remote Panel Module Fig. A-33: Front View of the RP32 Remote Panel Module Fig. A-34: Rear View of

Page 60

140TutorialsProducts

Page 61 - Bulk Configuration

141OperationAppendix B provides a a summary of panel operating principles. TopicsControl Panel Buttons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 62 - Using the Remote Panels Page

142OperationControl Panel ButtonsControl Panel ButtonsAll CR Series control panels have common button features. The CQX panels are somewhat different

Page 63 - Defining Button Functions

143CRSCUser’s GuideThe two fixed-function buttons are locks: • Panel Lock (the rightmost button). Prevents accidental changes on the entire panel.• De

Page 64 - Destination Selection Buttons

144OperationControl Panel ButtonsButton Order The order in which buttons appear on a control panel affects the meaning of level buttons. All panels ex

Page 65

145CRSCUser’s GuideFigure B-4 illustrates the terms: Fig. B-4: Buttons on a PanelIn this illustration, blue buttons are routed sources. The brown butt

Page 66 - Salvo Buttons

146OperationPower Up and ResetCQX Panel ButtonsCQX (“clean and quiet”) panels feature a unique set of buttons for executing smooth transitions. There

Page 67 - Salvo ID

147CRSCUser’s GuideAt power-up, and at every reset, a control panel’s ‘Panel Lock’ button is on and red. An operator must turn the panel lock off befo

Page 68 - Source Selection Buttons

4IntroductionHardware SummaryA CRSC network has the same topology as a stand-alone network (shown in Figure 1-1), except (1) the routers and remote pa

Page 69 - Paging Buttons

148OperationPerforming Takes• CQX router “clean and quiet” ‘takes’ employ transition type and rate (for outputs 1 and 2). See CQX Takes on page 155. C

Page 70 - Paging Button Types

149CRSCUser’s Guide3 Press source S. Pressing another destination button (always) starts a new take. In enhanced mode, a normal take occurs on all the

Page 71 - • Toggle Page 1 and Page 2

150OperationPerforming Takes4 Select levels A34 and A56 only. Press source 4.Double-press any of the level buttons to highlight the source that contri

Page 72

151CRSCUser’s GuideExample — Breakaway in Enhanced Mode without Hold — Variant 2You want to take all levels from source 1 to destination 3 except CTRL

Page 73

152OperationPerforming Takesis amber because SD is the primary level. The other level buttons are red because they are not primary. They are low-tally

Page 74 - How to Change the Panel Mode

153CRSCUser’s Guide2 Select just level A12. Press source 3. 3 Select just levels A34 and A56. Press source 4. If these levels are selected, you can do

Page 75 - Shortcuts

154OperationPerforming Takes3 Select just A34 and A56. Press source 4. Source 4 goes high-tally red because, like source 3, it is not the primary sour

Page 76 - Auto-increment

155CRSCUser’s GuideMachine Control Takes The method for performing a machine control take is the same as for any other compact router: first press a D

Page 77 - Context menus

156OperationPerforming LocksPerforming LocksPanel Lock Pressing a ‘Panel Lock’ button disables the control panel. Panel locks apply to all control pan

Page 78 - Context Menu for Sources

157CRSCUser’s Guide• Low-tally amber otherwise. To undo a simple lock, press the destination and then press ‘Destination Lock’. Complex Locks Press th

Page 79 - Context Menu for Salvos

5CRSCUser’s GuideCRSC Summary CRSC (the Compact Router System Configurator) is configuration software that runs on your PC.  If you have very old com

Page 80 - Identify CP

158OperationPerforming Level Selectionorder. Salvos do not loop and must not execute simultaneously. An attempt to run two or more salvos at once will

Page 81 - Reset Frame

159CRSCUser’s GuideTo illustrate, the following examples use a set of 6 sources and 6 destinations. Three of the sources and three of the destinations

Page 82

160OperationPerforming Level SelectionFigure B-7 shows level buttons again in the order AV, A12, TC, SD, but this time with level AV unselected: Fig.

Page 83

161CRSCUser’s GuideLevel Selection in Enhanced ModeIn enhanced mode, level buttons do not enable or disable levels, but select levels. What enables an

Page 84

162OperationPerforming Level Selection

Page 85 - The Table View

163Glossary3Gig Video at 2.97 or 2.967 Gbps. In Grass Valley routers, 3Gig cards support HD and SD signals as well. Video at 3Gig conforms to SMPTE s

Page 86 - Page Basics

164GlossarySalvo (1) A salvo is a stored sequence of simple takes that can be executed at a control panel. (2) A salvo can also mean a “snapshot” of a

Page 87 - Context Menu

165Symbols.crf (extension) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .91, 93.pfg (extension) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 88

166IndexBNC connectors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114, 126Boot version . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 89

167CRSCUser’s GuideConvert remote panel modules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .103Copy (command) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 90 - Jumping to Outputs

6IntroductionCRSC SummaryCRSC User InterfaceAfter CRSC is installed, you will probably have its icon on your PC desktop: Double-click the icon to laun

Page 91 - Diagonal Takes

168IndexDigital video . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .110router . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 92

169CRSCUser’s GuideJJump to . . . (command) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .76, 78LLabels, button . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 93

170IndexOutputs, locating . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78Outputs, viewing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 94

171CRSCUser’s GuideRemote panel, defined . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 163Remote Panelsfunction buttons . . . . . . . .

Page 95 - Range Takes

172IndexSupport, contact . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .173SWB (super wide band) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 96 - About AES Crosspoints

173Contact UsGrass Valley Technical SupportFor technical assistance, please contact the Grass Valley Technical Support center nearest you:Corporate H

Page 98

7CRSCUser’s GuideThe CRSC window is divided into two main parts, a navigation pane at the left, and a work area at the right: By clicking the differen

Page 99 - • Machine control routers

iiCopyright & Trademark NoticeCopyright © 2014 Grass Valley. All rights reserved.Belden, Belden Sending All The Right Signals, and the Belden logo

Page 100 - The Diagonal Take Shortcut

8IntroductionCRSC Summary• CR Series Ethernet Settings The ‘CR Series Ethernet Settings’ page lists all the CR Series products detectable on the net-w

Page 101 - The Shortcut Vertical Take

9CRSCUser’s Guide• Open Help SystemThis entry in the navigation pane does not select a page in the work area, but launches CRSC’s interactive help sys

Page 102 - Router Crosspoints Page

10IntroductionCRSC SummarySubnet MasksA subnet mask a set of bits that Ethernet uses to divide an IP address into a subnet field and a field for a dev

Page 103 - Firmware Updates Page

11CRSCUser’s GuideAfter the devices are added to your network, you can use CRSC to assign them specific IP addresses. (The new addresses must be writt

Page 104 - Page Features

12IntroductionUsage TipsWhere a switch setting supports multiple formats, the format is governed by the video reference applied to the router and must

Page 105 - Stopping an Update

13CRSCUser’s GuideUploading FirmwareYou will receive a firmware file when your receive CRSC. You can receive firmware updates peri-odically or upon re

Page 106

14IntroductionSetting Up Your Configuration PCCR Series routers and panels do not start, stop, rewind, cue, or otherwise control any media. You might

Page 107 - Using the Page

15CRSCUser’s Guide2 Double-click ‘Local Area Connection’. The ‘Local Area Connection Status’ dialog box appears: Fig. 1-6: Local Area Connection Statu

Page 108 - How to Reset Frames

16IntroductionInstalling CRSC4 Select ‘Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)’ and click Properties. The ‘Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) Prop-erties’ dialog box appea

Page 109

17CRSCUser’s GuideFollow these steps to install CRSC: 1 Insert the CD in your CD drive. Wait for the initial screen: Click the ‘CR Series Routing Prod

Page 110

iiiCRSCUser’s GuideChange History NoticesFCC Statement This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device

Page 111 - Locks Page

18IntroductionInstalling CRSC3 The installation script will begin to run: Click ‘Next’. 4 A window appears in which you can designate the location on

Page 112

19CRSCUser’s Guide5 A confirmation window appears: If the options presented are not correct, click ‘Back’ to go back to the previous window and re-ent

Page 113 - How to Release Selected Locks

20IntroductionInstalling CRSC6 After several seconds, the installation will complete. The completion window appears: Uncheck ‘Launch Compact Router Sy

Page 114

21CRSCUser’s Guide• Entries read “Different Subnet.” These are frames that are detectable by CRSC, but are not on a currently available subnet. To vie

Page 115

22IntroductionGetting Started

Page 116

23NVISION Series Products PageThe ‘NVISION Series Products’ page lists all NVISION series products — compact routers, remote panels, large routers, r

Page 117

24NVISION Series Products Page

Page 118

25Ethernet Settings PageSummaryThe ‘CR Series Ethernet settings’ page lists compact routers and remote panel modules available on the CRSC network. C

Page 119 - Tutorials

26Ethernet Settings PageSummaryButtons There are 4 buttons at the bottom of the page. Click Refresh List at any time to cause the page to display the

Page 120 - What is a Router?

27CRSCUser’s GuideUsageThe ‘CR Series Ethernet Settings’ page lets you can change the name, IP address, subnet mask, or gateway IP address of any comp

Page 121 - What is a Control Panel?

ivImportant Safeguards and NoticesThis section provides important safety guidelines for operators and service personnel. Specific warnings and caution

Page 122 - A Note About AES Signal Types

28Ethernet Settings PageUsageHow to Add Remote Panel Modules to a NetworkFollow these steps to add remote panel modules to your network: 1 Connect up

Page 123 - Partitions and Levels

29Router Levels PageSummaryThe ‘Router Levels’ page lets you view and change router levels: Fig. 4-1: Configure Router Levels PageThe page is divided

Page 124 - Remote Panel Operating Modes

30Router Levels PageBackground InformationBackground InformationYou may define up to 4 levels in any single router. A level is a router partition defi

Page 125 - Enhanced Mode

31CRSCUser’s GuideUsing the Router Levels PageAt the top of the page, the ‘Setup Crosspoint Ranges for Levels’ table displays all levels currently add

Page 126 - Connectors

32Router Levels PageUsing the Router Levels PageActive SubnetCRSC detects all subnets for which there are connections in your configuration PC. You ca

Page 127 - Making Connections

33CRSCUser’s Guide6 If you have a remote panel in your system, you might need to specify ‘Controller Input Start’ and ‘Controller Destination Start’ v

Page 128 - Sample Configuration

34Router Levels PageUsing the Router Levels PageWhen you have finished adding levels, click Update Router Levels to send the level configu-ration data

Page 129 - Partitioning

35CRSCUser’s GuideThere is a shortcut. Right-click a row to cause the context menu to appear: Choose Delete Level . . . and respond Ye s or No to the

Page 130

36Router Levels PageUsing the Router Levels Page

Page 131 - Cabling Diagram

37Machine Control Routers PageSummaryClick the ‘Setup Machine Control Router’ entry in the navigation pane to access the machine control routers page

Page 132

vCRSCUser’s GuideSymbols and Their Meanings General WarningsA warning indicates a possible hazard to personnel which may cause injury or death. Observ

Page 133 - Products

38Machine Control Routers PageBackground InformationBackground InformationCR Series machine control routers are different from other compact routers:•

Page 134

39CRSCUser’s GuideA controlling device sends commands to a controlled device. The controlled device passes responses (such as status) back to the cont

Page 135 - Remote Panel Modules

40Machine Control Routers PageBackground InformationMachine Control Router CrosspointsThe display of machine control “crosspoint matrices” is differen

Page 136 - Stand-Alone Operation

41CRSCUser’s GuideYou can click the upper left corner of the crosspoint matrix (above and to the left of column 1, row 1) to force a “diagonal” take f

Page 137 - CQX Usage

42Machine Control Routers PageUsing the Machine Control Router PageThe ‘Network Frame Summary’ presents the following option and information:How to Se

Page 138 - The Routers

43Remote Panels PageSummaryClick the ‘Program Remote Panels’ entry in the navigation pane to access the remote panels page: A remote panel is a contr

Page 139

44Remote Panels PageSummaryPage LayoutThere are 4 sections in the page: • Near the bottom of the page, a Network Frame Summary.This section has 3 tabb

Page 140

45CRSCUser’s GuideLevels These are the fields of the ‘Levels’ table in the ‘Network Frame Summary’: All CR Frames These are the fields of the ‘All CR

Page 141 - 3Gig Video Routers

46Remote Panels PageEssential Information• Update PanelClick this button to download the present configuration to the selected remote panel mod-ule. C

Page 142 - CQX Video Routers

47CRSCUser’s GuideOperators control a CRSC system using remote panels. An operator is presented with a large and potentially bewildering array of butt

Page 143

vi• To avoid fire hazard, use only the specified fuse(s) with the correct type number, voltage and current ratings as referenced in the appropriate l

Page 144 - Analog Video Routers

48Remote Panels PageEssential InformationEnhanced mode has 2 submodes:• Hold mode — the level selection persists after the destination button is press

Page 145 - Digital Audio Routers

49CRSCUser’s GuideThe panels that have “paging” buttons are the CP6464 and CP32-6464. These are the panels that can control networks that include CR64

Page 146 - Machine Control Routers

50Remote Panels PageUsing the Remote Panels Page• You can transfer levels from the ‘Levels’ table (in the Network Frame Summary) into the but-ton defi

Page 147 - Background Information

51CRSCUser’s GuideCQX PanelsThe ‘Remote Panels’ page supports remote panel modules to which a CP1602-CQX is attached. Because the CP1602-CQX is unique

Page 148 - The Control Panels

52Remote Panels PageUsing the Remote Panels Pageand the CP6401 — are exceptions. For these panels, the graphic has a button for the config-ured destin

Page 149 - 2RU Panels

53CRSCUser’s Guide3 Enter (level, output) pairs on rows of the table. Click on ‘Level’ field to select a level from drop-down list. Click in the ‘Outp

Page 150 - The Remote Panel Modules

54Remote Panels PageUsing the Remote Panels PageLevel Buttons A level is a partition within a router. A group of levels the router partitions that can

Page 151

55CRSCUser’s GuideTo configure a button as a salvo button:1 Click on the image of the particular button you want to configure. 2 Choose ‘Salvo’ from t

Page 152

56Remote Panels PageUsing the Remote Panels PageSource Selection ButtonsTo configure a button as a source button:1 Click on the image of the particula

Page 153 - Operation

57CRSCUser’s GuideWhen entering an input on level C, you specify an input in the range 1–8, not 17–24. Input 3 of level C is router input 19 (in this

Page 154 - Control Panel Buttons

vii1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1Hardware Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 155 - Red Buttons

58Remote Panels PageUsing the Remote Panels PageThe ‘Display Page 1’ button causes the panel to presentSegments 1 and 3 Functions 1–32 On the top 32 b

Page 156 - Button Illumination

59CRSCUser’s GuideFor the CP32-6464, this is a typical result (as far as the configuration page goes): For the CP6464, this is a typical result: • Dis

Page 157 - Level Button Illumination

60Remote Panels PageUsing the Remote Panels Page• Display Sources This button applies only to the CP6464. It causes functions 1–64 to appear on the 64

Page 158 - Power Up and Reset

61CRSCUser’s Guide1 Go to the ‘Program Remote Panels’ page.2 In the ‘Remote Panels’ tab at the bottom of the page, click the radio button in the ‘Edit

Page 159 - Performing Takes

62Remote Panels PageUsing the Remote Panels Page9 If you leave the remote panels page before you have saved your remote panel configuration, CRSC will

Page 160 - Normal Takes

63CRSCUser’s GuideShortcutsMultiple Button SelectionYou can select multiple buttons in the panel image using standard click, shift-click, and ctrl-cli

Page 161 - Breakaway Takes

64Remote Panels PageShortcutsThen drag the selection to the levels column: You must drag the levels to the first row at which you want to apply the se

Page 162

65CRSCUser’s GuideContext menus• The ‘Remote Panels’ page offers four context menus: • For destination button configuration • For source button config

Page 163

66Remote Panels PageShortcuts• Clear tableCRSC erases the entire destination table.The erasure extends to all destination buttons you have selected at

Page 164 - Single-Destination Takes

67CRSCUser’s GuideContext Menu for SalvosFor Panels Other than CP32-6464, CP6401, or CP6464If you right-click in the salvo table when you are configur

Page 165

viiiTable of Contents4 Router Levels Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 166

68Remote Panels PageShortcutsWhen you click this command, a dialog, such as this one for the input column, appears in which you can specify an integer

Page 167 - CQX Takes

69CRSCUser’s GuideReset FrameClick ‘Reset Frame’ to cause the remote panel module you right-clicked to reset, pending an alert message and your confir

Page 168 - Performing Locks

70Remote Panels PageShortcuts

Page 169 - Executing Salvos

71Router Crosspoints PageSummaryClick ‘View Router Crosspoints’ in the navigation pane to access the crosspoints page. In this page, you can view rou

Page 170 - Performing Level Selection

72Router Crosspoints PageSummaryThe grid that appears in the graphics view crosspoints page represents a router’s entire cross-point matrix, without r

Page 171 - Temporal Ordering

73CRSCUser’s GuideButtonsAt the very bottom of the page are 4 buttons:• Refresh Summary.Click Refresh Summary at any time to be sure that you are view

Page 172

74Router Crosspoints PagePage BasicsThe Graphic ViewColumns in the graphic view (or grid) are inputs; rows are outputs. There are as many rows and col

Page 173

75CRSCUser’s GuideIf you hover your mouse over a square, a help message appears: This message tells you the connection you will make if you click the

Page 174

76Router Crosspoints PagePage BasicsCopying and Pasting Crosspoint DataUsing the Copy and Paste commands (available in the context menu) you can trans

Page 175 - Glossary

77CRSCUser’s GuidePasteThe ‘Paste’ command updates the currently displayed crosspoint matrix with the contents of the Windows clipboard. If the clipbo

Page 176

ixCRSCUser’s GuideShortcuts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 177

78Router Crosspoints PagePage BasicsThere are 3 options in the dialog: • OutputTreat the first column of the clipboard data as outputs. The second col

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79CRSCUser’s GuideThis is the dialog under the graphic view: It has 2 field in which to enter an output and an input. Simply enter numbers in those fi

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80Router Crosspoints PagePage BasicsA reverse diagonal take connects inputs M to outputs N, in descending order, given an input starting point that yo

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81CRSCUser’s Guide6 Enter a starting input number in the ‘Input’ section. If you checked ‘Reverse’, the number you enter must be the highest input num

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82Router Crosspoints PagePage BasicsHow to Perform a Diagonal Take in the Graphic View1 Either click the ‘Diagonal Take’ button at the bottom of the p

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83CRSCUser’s Guide6Click Execute. The take is performed. Click Cancel to leave the dialog without performing any takes. (If any output is locked, the

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84Router Crosspoints PageAbout AES CrosspointsHow to Perform a Range Take in the Graphic View1 Either click the ‘Range Take’ button at the bottom of t

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85CRSCUser’s GuideUsing the Crosspoints PageThe page is divided into two sections. At the top is the crosspoint graphic At the bottom of the page, the

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86Router Crosspoints PageUsing the Crosspoints PageHow to Perform a Simple Take in the Graphic View• For video routers, synchronous AES routers, and o

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87CRSCUser’s Guide• Machine control routersMachine control takes also occur in pairs (in the display): However, how you choose the row and column affe

Modèles reliés CRSC v.3.1 | CRSC v.3.0 |

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