100
User's Guide Fireface 802
© RME
35. Technical Background
35.1 Lock and SyncCheck
Digital signals consist of a carrier and the data. If a digital signal is applied to an input, the re-
ceiver has to synchronize to the carrier clock in order to read the data correctly. To achieve this,
the receiver uses a PLL (Phase Locked Loop). As soon as the receiver meets the exact fre-
quency of the incoming signal, it is locked. This
Lock
state remains even with small changes of
the frequency, because the PLL tracks the receiver's frequency.
If an ADAT or SPDIF signal is applied to the Fireface 802, the corresponding input LED starts
flashing. The unit indicates LOCK, i. e. a valid input signal (in case the signal is also in sync, the
LED is constantly lit, see below).
Unfortunately, LOCK does not necessarily mean that the received signal is correct with respect
to the clock which processes the read out of the embedded data. Example [1]: The Fireface is
set to 44.1 kHz internally (clock mode Master), and a mixing desk with ADAT output is con-
nected to input ADAT1. The corresponding LED will show LOCK immediately, but usually the
mixing desk's sample rate is generated internally (also Master), and thus slightly higher or lower
than the Fireface's internal sample rate. Result: When reading out the data, there will frequently
be read errors that cause clicks and drop outs.
Also when using multiple inputs, a simple LOCK is not sufficient. The above described problem
can be solved elegantly by setting the Fireface from Master to AutoSync (its internal clock will
then be the clock delivered by the mixing desk). But in case another, un-synchronous device is
connected, there will again be a slight difference in the sample rate, and therefore clicks and
drop outs.
In order to display those problems optically at the device, the Fireface includes
SyncCheck
. It
checks all clocks used for
synchronicity
. If they are not synchronous to each other (i. e. abso-
lutely identical), the SYNC LED of the asynchronous input flashes. In case they are completely
synchronous, all LEDs are constantly lit. In example 1 it would have been obvious that the LED
ADAT 1 kept on flashing after connecting the mixing desk.
In practice, SyncCheck allows for a quick overview of the correct configuration of all digital de-
vices. So one of the most difficult and error-prone topics of the digital studio world finally be-
comes easy to handle.
The same information is presented in the Fireface's Settings dialog. In the status display
Sync-
Check
the state of all clocks is decoded and shown as simple text (No Lock, Lock, Sync).
Summary of Contents for Fireface 802
Page 7: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 7 User s Guide Fireface 802 General...
Page 12: ...12 User s Guide Fireface 802 RME...
Page 13: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 13 User s Guide Fireface 802 Installation and Operation Windows...
Page 28: ...28 User s Guide Fireface 802 RME...
Page 29: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 29 User s Guide Fireface 802 Installation and Operation Mac OS X...
Page 38: ...38 User s Guide Fireface 802 RME...
Page 39: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 39 User s Guide Fireface 802 Inputs and Outputs...
Page 47: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 47 User s Guide Fireface 802 Stand Alone Operation...
Page 50: ...50 User s Guide Fireface 802 RME...
Page 51: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 51 User s Guide Fireface 802 TotalMix FX...
Page 53: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 53...
Page 89: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 89 User s Guide Fireface 802 Class Compliant Mode...
Page 94: ...94 User s Guide Fireface 802 RME...
Page 95: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 95 User s Guide Fireface 802 Technical Reference...
Page 106: ...106 User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 36 Diagrams 36 1 Block Diagram Fireface 802...
Page 108: ...108 User s Guide Fireface 802 RME...
Page 109: ...User s Guide Fireface 802 RME 109 User s Guide Fireface 802 Miscellaneous...