Button behaviors – Aviom A-16II User Manual
Page 23

15
A-16ii P
ersonAl
M
ixer
U
ser
G
Uide
P
N
Ote
:
Always use caution when adjusting any audio system component to avoid potential hearing
damage.
Button Behaviors
There are various combinations of lighted and unlighted buttons on the A-16II Personal Mixer. Here is an
overview:
Channel buttons have two LEDs, an upper and lower. The upper button is red and
•
indicates that the channel is selected. The lower button is yellow; it indicates that the
channel is muted. Channel buttons will light solid or flash.
The
•
R
ecall
button has one red LED. It flashes when the R
ecall
button is pressed, indicating
that you can now select a mix Preset by touching any numbered button 1-16.
There is one LED in the
•
G
ROup
button. When the G
ROup
button is pressed, the LED flashes.
This indicates that you can now build or edit a Group.
The
•
R
ecall
and G
ROup
buttons will both flash when held down simultaneously. This is the
Save Mode, as indicated by the connecting graphic above the two buttons on the front
panel.
When a mix Preset is saved, all sixteen channel buttons will flash briefly to confirm the
•
Preset save operation.
The
•
S
OlO
button has one LED. It will light when pressed, indicating that the selected
channel or Group is now being auditioned with all other channels being muted. Two Solo
modes are available.
The
•
M
ute
button has no LED in it. Pressing the M
ute
button with a channel selected will
cause that channel’s lower (yellow) LED to light.
There is also one special button combination, the R
ecall
button followed by the M
ute
button. When used
together this combination serves a twofold function:
If there is a sudden change in the audio volume coming through the monitor system, this
•
button combination silences all audio channels instantly.
When starting from scratch to
•
create a mix, use this function to set all sixteen channels to
zero volume and all pans to the center settings.
P
N
Ote
:
The text on the right side of the Personal Mixer label reads “In Recall Mode All Volumes Zero”
as a reminder that this function is always available.