40
9. For the
Data Format
, select
ASCII
10. In the
Data
field, enter the command from the list above:
#GPO1[“CLOSE”, D20];
11. Click on
Finish Wizard
12. Click on
Save Action
13. Repeat steps 3 through 12 with the appropriate information to create the
Long-press
action
14. Click on
Event Creator
in the menu
15. Click on a row in the event list which has no trigger and is not yet defined, e.g. event 15
16. Now that the event is highlighted, click on the
Edit
button
17. In the
Name
field, enter
Short-press
18. Since this will only have a single action, the
Mode
does not matter
19. Select the
Short-press
action from the left-hand list to highlight it
20. Click on the
Add Selected
button to add it to the right-hand list
21. Click on the
Save Event
button
22. Repeat steps 15 through 21, using a different event (e.g. 16) and appropriate info to create the
Long-press
event
23. Click on
Buttons
in the menu
24. If it is not already marked, click on the
Page
x link you desire
25. Click on the one of the 8 buttons in the middle of the page (the desired button location)
26. In the right-hand entry area, enter a short
Button Text
, e.g.
Pairing
27. From the
Event
drop-down, select
Short-press
28. In the list of icons in the lower right, find the Bluetooth icon and click on it
29. Click on
Update Selected Button
30. Repeat steps 25 through 29 with a different button and appropriate settings to create a
Reset
button using the
Long-press
event
31. Now click on
Save Buttons
to update the device with the newly defined buttons
At this point, assuming the devices can reach each other on the network, the CB6000 can be used to control the CMBT
Bluetooth audio receiver remotely. Pressing the
Pairing
button will put it in pairing mode, and pressing that same but-
ton twice (while in pairing mode) will exit that mode. Now pressing the
Reset
button should cycle power on the CMBT
Bluetooth audio receiver, or first putting it in
Pairing
and then pressing
Reset
will clear the pairing list.
Optional Event for Aborting (Double-press)
In some cases, manually pressing the CB6000
Pairing
button twice may not be reliable. This might be the case if the
network being used is slow or has lots of traffic. In such cases, it might be useful to create a separate button to abort
the pairing mode. This can be done by adding and extra Action:
Name:
200ms delay
Command (Manual entry):
#SLP[T2];
Now edit a third undefined event location and name it
BT Abort
. Then set the
Mode
to
Each (in order)
and add first
the
Short-press
action, then the
200ms delay
action, then the
Short-press
action a second time. Finally save the
event. Assign this action to a button (perhaps with text
Abort
and the Bluetooth icon). Save it all and you now have a
separate button which you press just once to abort pairing (when already in pairing mode).
Other Devices
Setting this up on a CB-2000 is similar, though buttons are assigned there according to the Event number in which they
are defined (there is no separate step of defining
Buttons
). And, of course, these action and event definitions can be
used on other FrontRow devices which support such things, and in
Conductor
or
Maestro
triggers as well.
Содержание CB6000
Страница 1: ...CB6000 Installer Guide ...