Configuring a player as, An ltc receiver (slave), Examples that ar – Extron Electronics JMP 9600 User Guide User Manual

Page 97

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Configuring a player as an LTC receiver (slave)

A slave player can be programmed to begin playing the loaded clip or playlist when it
receives a particular LTC timestamp. A different LTC timestamp can be programmed for each
clip in a playlist.

Figure 72 shows using the Edit Playlist Properties dialog box to receive an LTC (

a

), start

the video 10 seconds after the receipt (a 10-second delay) (

b

), and run the LTC on until

01:05:00:00 (

c

). If the video presentation is 4 minutes and 30 seconds, this results in a

30-second post-roll period.

2
3

1

Figure 72.

Set an LTC Receiver, Pre-Roll, and Post-Roll

The file will run until a StopAt command halts the player and the display goes black after
5 minutes (01:05:00:00).

Besides setting the player as a slave and (if applicable) setting

Play At

and

Start At

times,

you need to consider, when configuring a slave player, whether to operate that player in
chase or trigger mode:

Chase Mode — The media player tracks (stays in sync with) the in-coming LTC.

Trigger Mode — The media player begins playback at a specific LTC timestamp value,
but continues playing without any further reference to the incoming LTC.

Chase or trigger can be selected using any of the following:

The front panel control (see “

Video submenu

“ in the “Operation” section)

The HTML setup dialog boxes (see “

Video mode setup dialog box

“ in the “HTML

Operation” section and figure 73)

The

SetTimecodeOpMode

MSVPP command (see “

Applicable MSVPP commands

”).

Figure 73.

Select an LTC Mode

JMP 9600 Media Player • Detailed System Interaction

91

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