Maximizing Channel Output

Video Transcript

0:09
When working on your system design, it may be important to maximize your audio output channels.
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Every unique signal that you send to an I/O Frame uses one Network Audio Channel,
0:19
but when that signal is being shared amongst multiple amplifiers
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and loudspeakers you can achieve far more physical output channels than Network Audio Channels.
0:26
The key to maximizing your channel output is to use your Network Audio Channels wisely.
0:32
If you have an I/O Frame with four Line Out cards, you could send one channel to this Frame
0:37
and then fan-out­ that one channel over all sixteen outputs in the I/O Cards.
0:43
Now you have sixteen physical outputs that are all carrying the same audio signal,
0:48
and you have only used one Network Audio Channel, which is packaged into one Network Audio Stream.
0:54
If you had sixty-four I/O Frames and each one of them only received one audio channel
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(which could be sixty-four different channels, or it could all be the same channel)
1:03
then each of these I/O Frames would use one Network Audio Stream with one Network Audio Channel in it,
1:10
so on a Core 110f you will be at your maximum of 64 Network Audio streams Out.
1:15
But each one of those 64 I/O Frames can then fan-out its audio signal over its 16 Line-Outputs,
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meaning that you have achieved a maximum of 1024 output channels.
1:28
The Core 110f can handle up to 128 input channels and 128 output channels.
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And different Cores can handle different loads.
1:39
The system can use up to 900 Mbps of bandwidth,
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so it is very unlikely that you’ll ever see a scenario where you are running out of network bandwidth.
1:46
However, if you’re sharing this gigabit network with other devices outside the Q-SYS system,
1:51
you may want to keep bandwidth efficiency in mind when building the system. Let me show you an example.
1:56
Every Network Audio Stream to or from an I/O Frame takes up some of your bandwidth from the network.
2:02
In this example, there are sixteen input channels all going into one I/O Frame,
2:06
which are packaged into one Network Audio Stream.
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This then leaves the system via another Network Audio Stream
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to sixteen output channels on a different I/O Frame. This design is very efficient.
2:18
But if an I/O Frame has both inputs and outputs, it will use two Network Audio Streams.
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This design here has the exact same setup as the last one, except the I/O Frames each have half the inputs
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and half the outputs. You can see that this requires two Network Audio Streams in,
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and two Network Audio Streams out,
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which has increased the amount of bandwidth on the network that you’re using.
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So if you weren’t sure before, hopefully this has clarified the different capacities of the Q-SYS Core.
2:47
With the right understanding of its abilities, you’ll be able to maximize the efficiency of your system
2:51
and make sure you customize your Core to your installation’s specific needs.
2:55
Thank you, and we’ll see you next time.