
28
Operation
Source and Destination Modes
The panel’s category buttons will probably be labeled. It is up to you, the operator, to
understand the labels.
Making a Category Selection
1 Put the panel in source mode or destination mode as required. (Note: you must select a
destination first, then the source, then press ‘Take’—
unless your panel is a single-
destination panel where the destination is always pre-selected.)
2 Press a category button that will initiate a category selection. The category name will
appear in the ‘Preset’ field of the display.
3 Press one more category buttons that append a suffix to the device name in the ‘Preset’
field.
4 Stop when your device name is complete. Proceed with other operations.
Example: To select the device SAT_A12, press a ‘SAT’ category button, followed by an ‘A’
suffix button, followed by a ‘1’ suffix button and a ‘2’ suffix button. The underbar would be
automatically generated. Depending on the NV9000 configuration, other such fill
characters might be used.
Source and Destination Modes
Category device selection is affected by source mode and destination mode. In source
mode, only source categories are selectable. In destination mode, only destination
categories are selectable. (Some devices, such as VTRs, are both sources and destinations.)
There are 3 button types that affect category device selection:
•
Source Mode
—
places the panel in source mode.
•
Destination Mode
—
places the panel in destination mode.
•
Src/Dst Mode
—
toggles the panel between source mode and destination mode.
It is likely that your panel will have a ‘Src/Dst Mode’ button and neither of the other two.
Levels
In NV9000-SE Utilities and in the NV9000 router control system, routes occur on
levels
. A
level is typically SD, HD, analog video, AES, analog audio, or machine control. Various
devices are defined as sending and receiving signals on certain levels. The set of levels
handled by a device belong to what is called a
level set
.
A source can be routed to a destination if it has the same set of levels, i.e., it belongs to the
same named level set. A source can be routed to a destination in a different level set if the
NV9000 configuration has the appropriate inter-level set mapping.
The effect of this is that when you, the operator, choose a destination, the NV9000 software
recognizes which source devices are allowed to be routed to the destination and limits your
selection to those sources.
Breakaway
Routes can be all-level in which case they are taken on all levels defined for the
destination
.
The acceptable sources for a route have the same levels as, or some configured mapping to,
the levels of the destination.
Summary of Contents for Grass Valley NV9603
Page 1: ...www grassvalley com User s Guide VERSION 1 2 UG0041 02 2015 07 02 NV9603 NV9000 CONTROL PANEL...
Page 6: ...vi Notices...
Page 10: ...x Table of Contents...
Page 16: ...6 Introduction Other NV9603 Functions...
Page 20: ...10 Installation Testing...
Page 57: ...47 NV9603 User s Guide Fig 6 1 Front View of the NV9603 1 72 43 7 19 0 482 6...