ClearOne Converge Pro User Manual

Page 88

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83

CONNECT COBRANET UNIT PROPERTIES

The next two figures show the

Unit Properties

tabs for the CONNECT CobraNet bridge.

On the

General

tab, set the

Device ID

(DID) to match that of the rotary selection switch of the CONNECT

CobraNet device.
The

CobraNet

tab is used to perform basic configuration setup of the CobraNet endpoint. These settings can

also be configured via third-party control software.

Room

is the same Room Location information available in

Unit Properties

on all CONVERGE Pro Products.

Board Name

,

Board Location

, and

Board Contact

are specific to CobraNet.

The default

Board IP Address

for CobraNet hardware is 0.0.0.0 and can be configured manually or automatically

via third party control software. The

Board MAC Address

and version information are also displayed here.

The

Link Status

indicators display the physical state of the CobraNet RJ-45 connection on the hardware.

Persistence

allows a way for CobraNet devices to either default or retain its settings on a power cycle. This

setting is redundant on a CONVERGE Pro system but is compatible with third-party CobraNet systems.

Conductor Priority

ranges from 0 – 255 and the default Priority is 32. Set

Conductor Priority

to less than 32

to ensure device never becomes the Conductor. Set

Conductor Priority

greater than 32 to increase chance of

being the Conductor.

RX Bundle Number

Rx Bundle Number sets the Bundle number that CobraNet receives from a CobraNet Transmitter. When set to 0
the receiver is off. Bundle Numbers 1 through 255 receive a Multicast stream. Bundles 256 through 65279 are for
Unicast. Finally, Bundles 65280 through 65355 are private bundle numbers and reserved for Cirrus Logic devices.
ClearOne CobraNet is not able to use the Private Bundles.

TX Bundle Number

Tx Bundle Number sets the type of transmitting bundle based on the Bundle Number. Bundle Numbers 1 through
255 will transmit a Multicast stream. Bundle Numbers 256 through 65279 are for Unicast and typical values start at
1000.

Bundle Latency

describes the buffering and transmission of audio data. This typically incurs a delay of 256

samples or 5 1/3 milliseconds. This delay can be reduced by sending smaller packets more often, but comes at
the cost of higher processing demands and greater network demands.

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