Grass Valley Maestro Master Control v.1.7 User Manual

Page 127

Advertising
background image

Maestro Channel Branding User Guide

123

3rd Step: Audio Sets

ture, 16 channels of audio per source are supported in Maestro without any
additional hardware.

Channel

Assign a channel for each output. The numbers refer to the 16 audio chan-
nels that are handled by the Maestro Processor.

Group Name

Create a name for the first audio group, for example, “Stereo.”

These names are the source for several headings that are used elsewhere in
the system:

Column headings in the right-hand portion of the Audio Input Table
(

Figure 97

).

Group selection “cluster” names on the audio control panel.

Group names at the top of the audio meter bars.

Note

These names are likely to be truncated when they appear on the tables and
displays due to space limitations. For example, “Stereo” may be shortened to
“Ster.” The actual number of characters shown will depend on the number of
groups and channels that are being displayed on the audio panel. For this
reason, it’s a good practice to keep these names as short as practical.

Group Type

The Group type choices are:

Mono (fully supported in v1.3 or later)

Stereo (fully supported in v1.3 or later)

Dolby 5.1 (fully supported in v1.5 or later)

Dolby 7.1 (not supported)

Dolby E pass-through (partially supported in v1.3 or later)

These selections are the source of column headings in the right-hand
portion of the Audio Input Table (

Figure 97

).

Supported types are described below.

Mono

A mono audio group will reserve two channels in the table, as every audio
channel in the Maestro processor is really a pair of channels for I/O pur-
poses (AES, embedded, etc). If only one mono audio group is defined, the
Maestro processor will always use the first channel of an audio pair. The
second channel can be used for another mono audio group or it can be left
empty. The empty audio channel cannot be used by any other audio group
type.

Advertising