Customising features – Meridian America Digital Audio Processor Meridian 518 User Manual

Page 13

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Overview of 518

13

518 User Guide

De-jittering. This is vital to getting good sound when recording or
playing back from a computer-based sound storage system.

Matching wordlengths input to output. Hard disc storage systems tend
to use 16 or 24 bits. While 16 bit storage is quite adequate for simple
transfer, it does not allow any headroom for manipulation of the
signals – without degrading noise. 518 can be used to ensure that all
the headroom in the disc storage is used by boosting the incoming
signals to full code. 518 is also ideally suited to translating 24 bit
storage to a downstream 16 bit recording medium like DAT or CDR.
In fact, the noise-shaping options of 518 allow most of the subjective
dynamic range of a 20 bit master to be retained in the 16 bit storage
device.

Accurate DSP. The quality of signal processing used in 518 is
substantially higher than that normally found in PC editors or sound
API functions. For example, 518 uses the most sophisticated re-
dithering technology combined with 72 bit internal processing to
ensure that any level changes or equalisations are made truly
transparent to the listener. Much of this technology is proprietary to
Meridian.

RS232 control. The 518 supports direct RS232 control from a PC–
effectively turning it into a 2-channel DSP peripheral.

Customising features

As the previous sections illustrate, the 518 is very flexible. You have the
opportunity to significantly customise its functions to give you the
functionality that exactly suits your application.

The section ‘Customising 518, an overview' on page 37 describes the
options in detail.

We recommend that you first get to know the 518 using one of the
standard setups, and by working through this manual. Do not be afraid
later to experiment with customising – we have given you a simple way to
get back to where you started! (See page 23).

518 as provided has three standard configurations that we call Type
settings. Each Type gives a different set of options; this feature is
described fully on page 23.

Note By selecting a Type you automatically reset all custom settings for
518 to that default.

518 has four operating modes (not to be confused with setup Types):

Normal

Standby

Type

Config

Normal and Standby are the everyday operating modes: the basic operat-
ing instructions refer to these.

Type, and Config are used to make choices about the way 518 works.
These are described later in the section: ‘Configuring 518, an overview' on
page 37.

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