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Section 7 AUDIO CODING PRINCIPLES
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audio bandwidth. However, the 32 kHz rate is generally preferred for broadcast
applications because no bits are wasted on frequencies above 15 kHz – which are not
transmitted, anyway.
Layer II primarily operates at 48kHz sample rate. However, the L2 HALF/24 Rcv and
Xmt modes allow operation at 24kHz when this sample rate is desired, primarily when
communicating with “single line” capable Layer II codecs.
Decoder Limitations
•
The Layer III decoder in L3 STEREO mode requires that both data channels be
connected and operating to function. Until both channels are present the decoder
will not output anything, even if the Xmt mode at the other end is not stereo.
•
If your application requires the ability for the two channels to come and go
independently, such as when they are from independent sites, you must use G.722.
That is the only decode mode which support fully independent operation.
•
A typical application which works perfectly within the above constraints is the one
used for dual- language sports broadcasts, with separate studio sites. L III Dual Xmt
mode is used from the stadium to the separate studio sites, while G.722 is used for
the cueing channel from the studios back to the stadium.
Compatibility
Layer II offers compatibility with the widest variety of non- Zephyr equipment. The
Zephyr bitstream is standard ISO format and may be used to communicate with any
codec which supports this standard. In modes which require two ISDN channels, the
channel- splitting (IMUX) method becomes an issue. The Zephyr supports the CDQ
splitting scheme, so it may be used with the codecs from a variety of vendors which
support this mode.
The Zephyr’s G.722 mode offers compatibility with almost all codecs which use this
coding method, and which do not use the rare H.221 framing scheme.
Manual section 8 ( Detailed Menu Reference) has more information about
compatibility, and the Appendix contains a section detailing known non- Telos
equipment compatibility.
Summary of Contents for Zephyr
Page 13: ...Table of Contents 13 SECTION 1 QUICK RESULTS ...
Page 26: ...Section 2 INTRODUCTION 26 This page intentially left blank ...
Page 27: ...Section 2 INTRODUCTION 27 SECTION 2 INTRODUCTION ...
Page 38: ...Section 2 INTRODUCTION 38 This page intentionally left blank ...
Page 39: ...39 SECTION 3 ZEPHYR AT A GLANCE ...
Page 52: ...Section 4 INSTALLATION BASIC OPERATION 52 This page intentionally left blank ...
Page 53: ...Section 4 INSTALLATION BASIC OP 53 SECTION 4 INSTALLATION BASIC OPERATION ...
Page 84: ...Section 4 INSTALLATION BASIC OPERATION 84 ...
Page 85: ...Section 5 ISDN 85 SECTION 5 ISDN ...
Page 105: ...Section 6 NON ISDN NETWORKS 105 SECTION 7 AUDIO CODING ...
Page 118: ...Section 7 AUDIO CODING PRINCIPLES 118 This page intentionally left blank ...
Page 119: ...Section 8 DETAILED MENU REFERENCE 119 SECTION 8 DETAILED MENU REFERENCE ...
Page 157: ...Section 9 REMOTE CONTROL 157 SECTION 9 REMOTE CONTROL ...
Page 176: ...Section 9 REMOTE CONTROL 176 This page intentionally left blank ...
Page 177: ...Section 10 ADVANCED PROBLEM SOLVING 177 SECTION 10 ADVANCED PROBLEM SOLVING ...
Page 196: ...Section 10 ADVANCED PROBLEM SOLVING 196 This page intentionally left blank ...
Page 197: ...Section 11 TECHNICAL INFORMATION 197 SECTION 11 DETAILED TECHNICAL INFORMATION ...
Page 219: ...Section 12 SCHEMATICS 219 SECTION 12 SCHEMATICS ...
Page 221: ...Section 13 MANUFACTURER S DATA SHEETS 221 SECTION 13 MANUFACTURER S DATA SHEETS ...
Page 223: ...Section 14 SPECIFICATIONS WARRANTY 223 SECTION 14 SPECIFICATIONS AND WARRANTY ...
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Page 229: ...Section 15 APPENDICES 229 SECTION 15 APPENDICES ...