Rane HAL1x Installation Guide - Page 50

DR Grounding, troubleshooting of the wiring

Page 50 highlights

HAL SYSTEM INSTALL GUIDE A huge advantage of these DR devices is their plug-and-play nature. When you connect a DR to the system, HAL automatically discovers and addresses it. In addition, just as with RADs, DRs use point-to-point wiring which eliminates problems of cable length, termination, and addressing. Troubleshooting time is also reduced because of DR status indicators on the HAL that immediately report the DR wiring status. And, finally, designers can test remote operation with or without the actual hardware. This offline testing is possible because of the Halogen software representation of each remote in the system. DRs connect to the HAL via DR ports, which are basically the same as RAD ports but with no audio. In other words, the DR ports provide a communications link and power, but no AES31 digital audio. Because RAD ports contain all the functionality needed by a DR, you can also connect DRs to RAD ports (if, for example, all your DR ports are full and you have a RAD port available). The opposite is not true, however. You cannot connect a RAD to a DR port. Some DR models (DR2, DR3, DR4, DR5 and DR6) can behave in a variety of ways. You use the Halogen software to configure their behavior. You can also enable and disable the individual controls on a DR (both manually, via control links to other remotes, and through the use of presets). For details, see the Halogen Help System. NOTE FOR DRAG NET USERS: Digital Remotes serve a similar function as the Smart Remotes used with Dragnet products. There is a key difference, however. Smart Remotes are multi-drop devices that must be daisychained together. Because they share bandwidth and power, the more Smart Remotes you connect, the slower the communications and the more sag in power delivery. DRs, on the other hand, are each connected directly to the HAL System and are, therefore, able to provide consistent, high performance. In addition, unlike Smart Remotes, you no longer have to worry about device addresses, cable length, cable termination, troubleshooting of the wiring, or complex processes for linking controls to audio processing. DR Grounding Careful grounding of DRs is important for optimum performance. Except for the DR4, all RADs and DRs are powered from the +24 VDC & Ground twisted pair located within the shielded CAT 5e (or better) cable connecting them to the HAL system of multiprocessors. The exposed metal of all RADs and DRs is connected to the ground conductor inside the cable and to the cable shield when properly terminated. The shield conductor and the ground twist are in parallel and are connected together at both cable ends. Except for in the RAD16z, this in turn connects the HAL/audio equipment rack grounding point and the metal (if used) junction box mounting the RADs and DRs. 1A standard from the Audio Engineering Society used for the transport of digital audio signals between professional audio devices. 44

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A huge advantage of these DR devices is their plug-and-play nature. When you connect a DR to the system, HAL
automatically discovers and addresses it. In addition, just as with RADs, DRs use point-to-point wiring which elim-
inates problems of cable length, termination, and addressing. Troubleshooting time is also reduced because of DR
status indicators on the HAL that immediately report the DR wiring status. And, finally, designers can test remote
operation with or without the actual hardware. This offline testing is possible because of the Halogen software rep-
resentation of each remote in the system.
DRs connect to the HAL via DR ports, which are basically the same as RAD ports but with no audio. In other
words, the DR ports provide a communications link and power, but no
AES3
1
digital audio. Because RAD ports
contain all the functionality needed by a DR, you can also connect DRs to RAD ports (if, for example, all your
DR ports are full and you have a RAD port available). The opposite is not true, however. You cannot connect a
RAD to a DR port.
Some DR models (DR2, DR3, DR4, DR5 and DR6) can behave in a variety of ways. You use the Halogen soft-
ware to configure their behavior. You can also enable and disable the individual controls on a DR (both manually,
via control links to other remotes, and through the use of presets). For details, see the Halogen Help System.
NOTE FOR DRAG NET USERS
:
Digital Remotes serve a similar function as the Smart Remotes used with Drag-
net products. There is a key difference, however. Smart Remotes are multi-drop devices that must be daisy-
chained together. Because they share bandwidth and power, the more Smart Remotes you connect, the
slower the communications and the more sag in power delivery. DRs, on the other hand, are each connected
directly to the HAL System and are, therefore, able to provide consistent, high performance. In addition,
unlike Smart Remotes, you no longer have to worry about device addresses, cable length, cable termination,
troubleshooting of the wiring, or complex processes for linking controls to audio processing.
DR Grounding
Careful grounding of DRs is important for optimum performance. Except for the DR4, all RADs and DRs are pow-
ered from the +24 VDC & Ground twisted pair located within the shielded CAT 5e (or better) cable connecting
them to the HAL system of multiprocessors. The exposed metal of all RADs and DRs is connected to the ground
conductor inside the cable and to the cable shield when properly terminated. The shield conductor and the ground
twist are in parallel and are connected together at both cable ends. Except for in the RAD16z, this in turn connects
the HAL/audio equipment rack grounding point and the metal (if used) junction box mounting the RADs and
DRs.
1
A standard from the Audio Engineering Society used for the transport of digital audio signals between pro-
fessional audio devices.
HAL SYSTEM INSTALL GUIDE
44