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Rane RPM 26i User Manual

Page 14

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Manual-14

OUTPUT TRIM

The Output Trim’s purpose is to provide

up to 30 dB of attenuation on each Output.
This is useful to adjust for speaker sensitivity
in both distribution and crossover applications
where each output may require a different
level. Use the

Mute button to turn individual

Outputs off.

Click on the up and down arrows to increment or decre-

ment the Output Trim.

For more precise control of the Output Trim, double click

on the Output Trim block. You may double click anywhere
except on the arrows or on the Mute button to open the detail
window, shown below.

The name of the processing block appears at the top of

each detail window, in this case, Output

Trim 1. The horizon-

tal scroll bar adjusts the Trim control in three ways. Clicking
the left or right arrows adjusts the trim in ½ dB steps. Click-
ing between the arrows and the sliding box (Thumb) adjusts
the Trim in 5 dB steps. Clicking and holding the Thumb
allows you to drag the control.

The Output Trim controls a DCA attenuator which

maintains output dynamic range over a wide range of attenua-
tion settings. Even
though the screen
shows the Output Trim
before the Limiter and
the D/A converter, the
attenuator is after the
D/A converter inter-
nally. However, the
unit operates as if the
Output Trim control
were before the D/A
and the Limiter. Since
the RPM 26i knows the
analog Output Trim
attenuation, the Limiter
Threshold is internally
and transparently
adjusted to keep audio
operation as displayed.
Therefore, what you see
is what you get. The
Output Trim’s detail window is shown here:

The

Output Meter displays the voltage level at the output

screw terminal of the RPM 26i in dBFS if the

Master Output

Lvl is set to 0 dB. Add the Master Output Level to each
Output Meter Level to get the level at the unit’s output. The
Mute button mutes the given output. The Invert check box
inverts the polarity of the given output. When ramping is
enabled, each time the

Invert box is changed the given

output’s level ramps to off , the polarity is inverted and the
level ramps back up. Many people frown upon purposely
inverting the polarity of an audio signal. The invert function
here is provided solely as a convenient tool for testing
polarity. In permanent installations it is always wise to correct
polarity inversion problems through other more permanent or
“hardware” means such as correcting cable-wiring errors.

AES3, D/A AND METERING

Now, a word about metering and our

pal, the Windows operating system.
Displaying meters on computers poses a
unique problem for software designers and
sometimes for users, especially if you have
a “slow” computer. Everyone is familiar
with analog meters without computers deciding that display-
ing meter indicators needs to wait until a “more important”
task is completed. Windows provides the RPM 26i software
an update window opportunity every 100 milliseconds (10
times per second). And, since there are more than just meters
to update, other functions at the computer’s discretion can
have a higher priority than the meters. This simply translates
into “the more meters you have on the screen, the more
sluggish and inaccurate they will appear.”
For this reason, it
is wise to adjust the RPM 26i

Trim controls or view its meters

one at a time. This displays the least number of meter
indicators on the screen, making the display’s update rate as
reliable as possible.

The

Signal AES3 and D/A blocks on the RPM 26i Device

Edit screen indicate where in the signal chain the AES3 and
D/A conversions occur. These blocks also contain the signal
present and overload indicators, all of which default to single,
two-color indicators: green for signal present, red for over-
load and gray for no signal detected.

Double clicking on any of the

AES3 or D/A

blocks turns it into an eleven segment meter. The top
segment lights at -2 dBFS, each subsequent segment
lights 3 dB before the segment above it. Again, to
keep the meters as reliable as possible, keep as few
meter segments on the screen as possible when
adjusting levels.

The RPM 26i’s front panel is microprocessor controlled

with a guaranteed update rate of 90 milliseconds, or just over
11 times per second. The peak level of the audio samples
within that 90 ms are displayed.

MASTER OUTPUT LEVEL

The

Master Output Level operates all six output DCA

attenuators simultaneously, while keeping the Output Trims
the same relative to one another. The Output Trim and the
Master Output Level operate the same attenuator, but they are
otherwise independent. Therefore, the overall attenuation of
a given output is the sum of the attenuations of the Output
Trim and the Master Output Level. This control does not
affect the Output Meter or the Limiter Threshold. When
setting the Limiter, the Master Output Level must be taken
into account.

The

Link selection box “ties” groups of output Trim

controls together. There are 4 possible groups,

None, 1, 2 or

3. None in the selection box indicates the given output is tied
with no other output. If two outputs’

Link boxes share a

common value, for example

1, then those two output trims

are linked together.