Preliminar y, Special applications – Extron Electronics MLC 104 Plus Series User Manual

Page 106

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MLC 104 Plus Series • Special Applications

5-2

Special Applications

PRELIMINAR

Y

There are numerous ways to use a MediaLink Controller to control and monitor

A/V systems. The MLC 104 Plus Series Setup Guide and chapters 3 and 4 of this

manual cover typical uses and features. This chapter shows you how to set up the

MLC for a few specialized applications.

Before configuring the MLC,

1.

Connect cables between the MLC, the input/output devices, and the PC as

described in

chapter 2

2.

Install and start the Global Configurator software and create or open a GC

project, and add an MLC to the project, if that hasn’t already been done. For

instructions, refer to chapter 3 of the MLC 104 Plus Series Setup Guide, steps 1,

2, and 3.

3.

In Global Configurator, add device drivers and assign them to the Display

RS-232/IR port or MLS port. For instructions on these tasks, refer to chapter 3

of the MLC 104 Plus Series Setup Guide.

Using Monitoring to Make Functions Track Actual

Conditions

Sometimes a discrepancy occurs between an input or output device’s actual status

and the status known to the MLC. For example, if users have access not only to the

MLC but also to the control panels or remote controls of input and output devices,

they can directly change various kinds of device status and settings without using

the MLC.
Status discrepancies can also happen in installations where the MLC is the only

control device in a room. Most projectors automatically unmute when receiving an

input change command. So, if inputs are switched via the MLC’s front panel while

a projector’s video is muted, the projector unmutes itself, and the MLC does not

know about that change.
To avoid a status discrepancy when configuring the MLC’s button functions and

scheduling events, you can set up a monitoring routine.
For example, let’s say that you set up an MLC front panel button (input 4 for this

example) in toggle mode to send the projector a video mute command on one press

and a video unmute command upon the next press. If you press the input 4 button

once, the MLC sends the video mute command. The next time you press that

button, the MLC sends the video unmute command. But what if someone uses the

projector’s remote control to unmute the video before the next MLC button press?

The MLC issues a video unmute command when the input 4 button is pressed, and

the projector continues displaying video — there is no change in mute status.
However, if you also configure the MLC to check the projector’s A/V mute status

each time the input 4 button is pressed, you can make the MLC act (or not) based

on the actual device status so that the MLC executes the correct action regardless of

what happened the last time the MLC’s button was pressed. This keeps the toggle

button synchronized with the status of the controlled device.

N

For monitoring, the device must be connected to one of the MLC’s bidirectional

ports.

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