
Dante-MY16-AUD2 User Guide
Copyright © 2016 Audinate Pty Ltd. All rights reserved.
-39-
Click the Multicast Configuration button
in the toolbar of the Device View to open the Create
Multicast Flow panel, which allows you to select individual channels to add to a new multicast flow.
The panel shows a list of the Tx channels for the device, and allows you to add them to the new multicast
flow that is being created, by checking the tick box next to each channel name. Once you have selected all
the channels required, the multicast flow can be created by clicking the Create button at the bottom of the
dialog box. To abandon creating a new multicast flow, click the Cancel button.
A single multicast flow can contain up to the maximum supported channels per flow for this device. This is
displayed at the top of this window, and is 8 channels for this device. If you select more than the maximum
allowed channels per flow, multiple flows will be created. Once a flow has been created, it will appear in the
list of flows in the transmit pane, along with the channels contained within that flow. Also, once a flow has
been created, it cannot be edited, channels cannot be added or removed. Each time the dialog is used to
select additional channels, a new multicast flow will be created.
AES67 Flow
The AES67 Flow option is only available for
(which includes the Dante-MY16-
AUD-II).
When AES67 Flow is checked, the selected channels will be added to an AES67 flow. Only AES67-
enabled devices can receive AES67 flows.
AES67 flows appear in blue at the far right of the Routing tab of the Network View, and at the bottom of the
Available Channels list in the Device View receive tab. AES67 flows are identified by their transmit
multicast IP addresses, rather than device names.
For AES67 devices, each device transmit channel can simultaneously support an AES67 multicast flow
and a standard Dante multicast flow.