NV9607 Control Panel • User’s Guide
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2. Introduction
Panel Organization
The display fields can show either names in a name set or system mnemonics for devices depend-
ing on (1) the state of the ‘Name Set Toggle’ button (if the panel has one), (2) the default name set
(3) the existence of name sets in the NV9000 configuration.
Flags
The display also shows flags of different kinds next to the sources and destinations.
Selection Marks
At the far right of the display are marks (3 small bars) that turn on to indicate selections.
In MD mode, a mark appears to the right of the currently selected destination (and of all the cur-
rently selection destinations in hold mode).
In the other modes, the marks turn on to indicate that a level is selected and are not visible other-
wise. (The operator makes level selections in the button array.)
Other Signs
A plus sign (+) indicates that additional information is available. There is an ‘Info’ button type
available so that operators may view the additional information.
In MD mode, an asterisk (*) directly after a source indicates a breakaway on that destination.
An ‘L’ indicates that a device has been locked. A ‘P’ indicates that a device has been protected.
NV9607 operators may lock, protect or release destinations. It is important for operators to know
that other operators may lock, protect, or release sources and destinations.
Tally Interface
At the rear of the panel is a DB25 connector that provides 8 tally inputs and 4 tally outputs. (The
outputs are solid state relay outputs.) Both inputs and outputs are optically isolated.
During configuration, you can construct Boolean logic that switches the outputs on or off. The
terms of the logic expressions are states of the source and destination devices, etc., controlled by
the NV9000 control system.
During configuration, you can prescribe NV9607 behavior that depends on the tally inputs.
What you connect to the tally interface is, of course, up to you. Miranda provides a breakout cable
(WC0053) that can be used with the tally connector, as a purchase option.
Note that the NV9000-SE Utilities on-line help documentation calls the tally interface a GPIO
interface. On the rear of the panel, it is labelled a “GPI interface.”
, on page 67, for complete detail.
Summary of Contents for NV9606
Page 10: ...x Rev 1 0 21 May 10 Table of Contents ...
Page 20: ...10 Rev 1 0 21 May 10 2 Introduction Other NV9607 Functions ...
Page 40: ...30 Rev 1 0 21 May 10 4 Configuration Multi Destination Configuration ...
Page 66: ...56 Rev 1 0 25 May 10 5 Operation Setup Mode ...
Page 72: ...62 Rev 1 1 21 May 10 6 GPIO Configuring Inputs ...
Page 82: ...72 Rev 1 0 21 May 10 8 Misc Topics Power Cord Retention ...
Page 90: ...80 Rev 1 0 18 Aug 10 Index ...