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Wiring
Q-SYS QuickStarts : Public Address (Paging Systems)
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CERTIFICATION STEPS COMPLETED
Certification Steps Completed
1 ) Control QuickStarts
4h 18m 13s
Arrays of Controls
15m 13s
The State Trigger Control
18m 20s
Interlocking Buttons
24m 52s
Named Components
21m 25s
Deep Lua: Arrays, Tables, and Loops (part 1: Tables and Arrays)
17m 12s
Deep Lua: Arrays, Tables, and Loops; Oh My! (part 2)
15m 57s
Deep Lua: Arrays, Tables, and Loops (part 3: GetComponents)
14m 20s
Deep Lua: Demystifying The EventHandler
30m 36s
Dynamic Scripting (for Press & Hold Presets) with a good bit of JSON too!
36m 14s
Status Indicators and the hidden power of Lookup Tables in Lua
22m 34s
Multidimensional tables and Lua's version of the switch-case
16m 2s
Demystifying the role of "Control Frames" in QSYS
25m 28s
2 ) Q-SYS Networking Fundamentals
57m 47s
Introduction to Q-SYS Networking
8m 36s
Q-SYS Network Topologies
9m 14s
Prioritization
7m 41s
Multicast and Bandwidth
15m 27s
Q-SYS Reflect
5m 13s
Isolated Networks
11m 36s
Assessment
3 ) Public Address (Paging Systems)
1h 43m 49s
Terminology
9m 26s
Wiring
11m 18s
Administrator Settings
14m 57s
Virtual Page Station Controls
14m 37s
Virtual Page Station UCI
7m 4s
Command Buttons
12m 5s
PA Router Control Panel
4m 41s
Priority Ducker
15m 21s
BGM Ducking
7m 3s
Core to Core Paging
7m 17s
4 ) Automatic Camera Preset Recall (ACPR)
13m 16s
Intro to ACPR
2m 11s
ACPR v3.0 Update
4m 27s
Autoframing with ACPR
3m 22s
How To Enable Auto Framing
3m 16s
5 ) Video Freeze for NV Endpoints
1m 41s
Video Freeze for NV Endpoints
1m 41s
6 ) Camera Streams to NV Series devices
2m 47s
Camera Streams to NV Series devices
2m 47s
7 ) Q-SYS Security – Introduction and Best Practices
13m 35s
Introduction to Q-SYS Security
3m 3s
Q-SYS Security Best Practices
10m 32s
8 ) Integrating Microsoft Teams Room
8m 54s
Integrating Microsoft Teams Rooms into Q-SYS
8m 54s
9 ) HID Conferencing
1m 58s
HID Conferencing
1m 58s
10 ) Integrating Axon C1
14m 34s
Integrating Axon C1: Part A
7m 26s
Integrating Axon C1: Part B
7m 8s
11 ) Bring Your Own Control with Q-SYS
4m 32s
Bring Your Own Control with the Q-SYS Ecosystem
4m 32s
12 ) Feature License Activation
4m 12s
Feature License Activation
4m 12s
13 ) Q-SYS Video 101 Training
0m 0s
Link to the Q-SYS Video 101 Training Series
0m 0s
14 ) Block Controller
19m 9s
Part A: Block Controller A
9m 50s
Part B: Block Controller B
9m 19s
15 ) Online Connectivity & Security Considerations
12m 37s
Online Connectivity & Security Considerations
12m 37s
16 ) Intro to External Control
23m 3s
Part A: Connecting to Q-SYS
7m 34s
Part B: Issuing Controls
7m 37s
Part C: Managing Change Groups
7m 52s
17 ) Dynamic Pairing
6m 38s
Part A: Dynamic Pairing
6m 38s
18 ) Core-to-Core Streaming
8m 23s
Part A: Core-to-Core Streaming
8m 23s
19 ) Room Combining
12m 23s
Part A: Build a Room Mockup
6m 23s
Part B: Wiring Your Design
6m 0s
20 ) Notch Feedback Controller
4m 0s
Part A: Notch Feedback Controller
4m 0s
21 ) Ambient Noise Compensators
14m 9s
Part A: Ambient Compensator Setup
4m 13s
Part B: Gated Ambient Compensator
4m 19s
Part C: Continuous Ambient Compensator
5m 37s
22 ) Intro to Control Scripting
12m 30s
Part A: Control Script Component
6m 39s
Part B: Fader Turns Red
5m 51s
23 ) Networking Overview
15m 3s
Part A: Basic Networking
4m 35s
Part B: Network Protocols
4m 28s
Part C: Q-LAN - Audio Channels vs. Audio Streams
2m 29s
Part D: Q-LAN - Maximizing Channel Output
3m 31s
24 ) E-Mailer
6m 30s
Part A: E-mailer Component
6m 30s
Video Transcript
Video Transcript
Wiring
11m 18s
00:06
All right, let’s get started.
00:07
We’re going to build out a very small PA system here,
00:11
just with a couple of rooms.
00:13
It should be pretty easy to extrapolate how you would
00:16
expand that for a much larger system.
00:18
I’m just going to show you the basics at this point,
00:21
and then if you need to add, you know,
00:23
100 page stations and 100 zones,
00:26
you should be able to figure that out on your own.
00:28
So, in CUSIS Designer software,
00:30
we’re going to go to the schematic elements library.
00:34
We’re going to look in the audio components,
00:36
and there’s a section called Public Address.
00:38
There are only two objects in here: the PA router
00:41
and the virtual page station.
00:42
We’re going to need both of those.
00:44
So, I’m going to bring in the PA router and the virtual page station.
00:48
As you drag the PA router in,
00:50
you’ll immediately see that it is configured for
00:53
eight stations and eight zones.
00:55
You hover your mouse over the inputs,
00:57
and it’ll tell you what those represent.
00:59
We’re going to adjust that for our setup.
01:02
By the way, if you’ve got a core,
01:05
you should absolutely follow along with me,
01:07
everything that I do.
01:08
If you don’t have a core,
01:10
there are going to be some areas that
01:12
you’re limited and you can’t access,
01:13
and you’re not going to be able to have as much fun.
01:15
You can still follow along by all means;
01:17
there’s lots of stuff you can do in the administrator.
01:19
But realistically, this is one you kind of need some hardware for,
01:23
especially if you want to issue any pages
01:25
because then you need a microphone.
01:26
So, I’ve got my virtual page station, here’s my PA router.
01:29
I’m going to adjust the properties.
01:31
I’m going to say I have two stations rather than eight,
01:35
and I’m going to say there are five zone outputs.
01:38
We’re just going to say there are five rooms for us,
01:40
and that’ll let me kind of zoom in a little bit and get a little bit closer here.
01:45
So, I’ve got a virtual page station with a triangular pin.
01:51
If you can’t figure out where to wire that to, then I’m sorry,
01:54
your days with CUS are over.
01:57
This is pretty simple: triangles go to triangles.
02:00
So, I’m going to wire my triangle to the triangle right there.
02:03
If you hover over the pin, it says “Station 1 Control.”
02:05
Now, above that is a pin that says “Station 1 Audio.”
02:10
I would argue that this is actually not the best name for this pin.
02:15
“Station 1 Audio” implies that you would need to
02:19
wire any kind of audio that you’re going to be
02:20
making from this page station through that pin,
02:22
and that is not true.
02:25
This pin should be labeled “Station 1 Microphone.”
02:28
Only a microphone would ever be wired to this pin.
02:32
I’ve seen people get this wrong and think that because it says
02:35
“Audio,” they need to grab an audio player and play
02:40
their messages from this pin.
02:43
That makes sense if you haven’t watched my video,
02:45
but fortunately, you’re watching the video and
02:47
you’ll never make that mistake, right? Good.
02:50
This is wrong. Don’t do this.
02:52
When you send a message in a PA system,
02:56
that message is played from within the PA router itself.
02:59
You don’t need to waste an audio player;
03:01
you don’t need to waste any of your audio player tracks
03:04
in order to have messages play in your system.
03:06
The PA router is basically like a big giant thing that can
03:10
play as many audio files as you want from within it.
03:13
Which actually means, if we want to be sneaky—
03:16
my boss is not in the room right now,
03:17
so I’m allowed to tell you this
03:18
—if you want to be sneaky and you’re ever doing
03:20
a design and you just need one or two more audio tracks,
03:24
you could use a PA router and play messages through it.
03:27
It’s not perfect because the PA router will take like
03:29
half a second or so before it plays the audio file,
03:32
unlike an audio player which is already ready
03:34
to be queued up and plays the moment you hit the play button.
03:36
But I’ve done that before.
03:37
I’ve been like, “I just need one more audio track,
03:39
I’m going to use a PA system.”
03:41
Anyways, the reason why I’m going to be replaced
03:45
in the next video is because I’m giving away the trade secrets.
03:47
Anyways, so this is a microphone pin.
03:51
I happen to have a microphone connected to the
03:53
first mic channel of my core that I’m connected to,
03:56
so I’m going to wire in my microphone to that
04:00
station one microphone pin.
04:03
Here I have my first station.
04:05
I have an input for my mic or my voice,
04:08
and I have the control that is within the virtual page station
04:11
to issue those commands.
04:12
Now, I also have under the desk here that physical page station,
04:15
so I’m going to add that too.
04:17
You can find it in the audio Q-Lan branch of your inventory.
04:23
There’s a section called Page Stations.
04:25
There’s the PS600 and the 1650.
04:28
Slight difference between the two of them.
04:30
There are also two models of each of those.
04:32
One of them has a handheld mic like we saw,
04:34
the other one has a gooseneck mic that sprouts out of it.
04:37
But in here, it’s the same.
04:38
I’m going to add the 1600,
04:40
and I’ll tell you what the difference is in the keypad just a little bit later.
04:43
I’m going to drag in the mic control components,
04:46
and here once again we see that exact same thing:
04:49
the microphone and the control.
04:51
If you once again can’t figure out how to wire it up,
04:54
then you are doomed. Sorry.
04:56
All right, so I’ve got my two stations wired up.
04:59
By the way, the PA router itself,
05:01
when I changed its properties to adjust the number of stations and zones,
05:06
it’s worth noting that if you hover your mouse over any of these properties,
05:09
it’ll tell you what the range is.
05:11
A single PA router can handle up to 256 possible stations
05:16
and up to 512 possible zones.
05:19
So, if you’ve got an installation that requires more than that,
05:25
I am so sorry for you and all of your life choices.
05:28
That is a lot.
05:31
There is a way that if you ever possibly need more channels than this,
05:37
you could hook these up to another core that’s
05:40
also in the same world and send pages from one core to the other.
05:43
We’ll talk about that at the end of this training.
05:46
But generally speaking, we found that 256 stations
05:49
and 512 zones is more than enough.
05:52
We’ll talk about the rest of these properties a little bit later.
05:56
It is also really worth noting that the PA router
05:58
—you can only have one of them in your design.
06:01
Even if you have a system that’s managing what you would
06:05
consider to be completely segregated paging systems that
06:08
are maybe in different buildings or they don’t
06:10
interact at all or whatever it is,
06:12
you still have to manage that through the one
06:14
PA router in the software.
06:16
That’s still going to be able to handle all of the
06:18
channels and zones and everything like that.
06:20
You’ll just have to make sure that the page stations
06:22
for those segregated areas only have access to the
06:25
zones that are relevant for them to page to.
06:28
All right, so we’ve got our output zones here.
06:31
Again, a zone could be a single speaker,
06:33
it could be a thousand speakers.
06:35
But right now, it comes out as a mono channel because
06:37
we’ve got our one microphone that we’re talking into.
06:39
I’m just going to use some signal tags for now to represent these.
06:43
I’m just going to type in the destinations that we
06:47
would use from our level two class.
06:49
So, if you’ve taken level two, you might be familiar with this.
06:51
I’m going to use the lobby as our first zone.
06:55
We’re going to use the conference room as our second zone,
06:58
and then we have a multi-purpose room that can be divided into three different rooms.
07:03
So, NPR 1, 2, and 3, and those will be the zones
07:07
for our fake little demonstration here.
07:10
This is in the instance of a fake hotel.
07:12
These are all areas in our hotel that we’re going to be paging,
07:16
like a nice little instance of a small hospitality venue.
07:20
Okay, wiring-wise, the only thing that we haven’t
07:22
integrated yet is the ducking system,
07:25
and I’m going to save that for a little bit later because
07:27
I want to show you the ducking live.
07:29
I can’t show you the ducking unless we’re actually issuing
07:31
some pages and some messages,
07:33
so I’m not even going to wire it up yet.
07:35
We’ll save that for closer to the end.
07:37
Right now, we’ve got our stations hooked up,
07:40
we’ve got our microphone coming in.
07:41
Oh, but first, let me, of course, name my page station
07:44
so that it matches the name of the page station that’s on my network.
07:48
I have named mine “training.ps600,” and that way,
07:52
we’ll connect properly.
07:54
I’ve also got my touchscreen that’s already here.
07:57
I’ve got another core, which we’ll talk about a little bit later.
07:59
All right, now my devices are named properly.
08:02
We’ll save to the core and run,
08:05
and we’ll get this system up and running.
08:08
Okay, I’m connected to the core.
08:09
Let’s get some of these devices up here.
08:11
So, I’ve got this microphone,
08:13
which is going to be used for my voice.
08:17
I’ve got this touch panel right here with a UCI.
08:19
We’re going to use that to interact with my virtual page station,
08:22
and we’re going to use the physical page station every now and then as well,
08:25
so we can see how that works.
08:35
But wait, there’s more!
08:38
As you can tell by this indelicate insertion into the video,
08:41
there’s actually a newer version of a page station
08:45
that you can use that was not available when we
08:47
filmed the majority of the video,
08:49
but I want to make sure that you can see it.
08:51
And that is this one here.
08:52
This is new for us now,
08:54
but maybe not so new for you now watching this in the future.
08:57
This is the PSTS, a page station dock that uses a touchscreen embedded into it.
09:04
Essentially, this is a cradle that puts a touch
09:07
panel into it with a little magnetic seal,
09:10
and it’s got a microphone built in.
09:12
It’s got a button built in right here that gets connected
09:15
to the touchscreen via a little USB connection on the inside,
09:19
and that will sort of replace the physical page station that we saw previously.
09:25
This is, under the hood, just another virtual page station.
09:29
Realistically, it’s still a microphone in a dock and a touchscreen,
09:34
that’s all it is.
09:35
So, in the software,
09:36
you can add this by going to the Audio QAN section,
09:40
adding the PSTS from the Page Stations tab.
09:44
And here, once you have that and you add it into the design,
09:47
it just adds in like any other page station.
09:50
The physical component has the audio of the microphone
09:53
there and the control that comes in.
09:55
So, everything that you see for the rest of these videos
09:59
will be exactly as relevant for this device as it would be for this one.
10:03
Even though you’re still creating a virtual display on the touchscreen itself,
10:07
you are combining that with the physical controls.
10:10
So, it’s a little bit of this and that from the
10:11
physical page station and the virtual page station.
10:14
But I wanted to make sure you saw that.
10:16
It’s new, it’s cool, it’s the latest and greatest.
10:20
But for the rest of the videos,
10:22
I’ll be using the old physical page station because that’s what I had at the time.
10:25
All right, let’s get back to me.
10:30
First thing I want to do is actually make sure that my microphone is on.
10:33
I’m going to go to my mic line in,
10:36
turn on phantom power for this gooseneck.
10:38
I can see I’ve got a little LED on there now.
10:40
I probably need to raise up the preamp gain a little bit.
10:44
Check, check, check. This is my voice. All right, that looks pretty good.
10:47
Throughout the course of this, as I show you,
10:50
I’m going to use my hover monitor here in
10:52
Designer so that you can hear it from CUS itself.
10:55
So, I’m going to just maybe pin open this hover
10:58
monitor and unmute it so that when I do make an announcement,
11:02
we can see it comes out of there.
11:03
In fact, I can do that right now with my microphone.
11:06
Let’s double-check that my microphone is indeed working.
11:11
Hello, how are you?
11:12
Oh, indeed it worked.
administration
Data retention summary