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Db9 cables, Remote control emulation, Db9 cables remote control emulation – Aviom 6416Y2 User Manual

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determine a Pro64 product’s firmware version and to update it to the latest version. The current version of the

Pro64 Network Manager application and all associated Pro64 firmware update files are available on the Aviom

website free of charge. For best performance always use the latest revision of the firmware in all Pro64 devices.

DB9 Cables

Using m‑control requires at least one 6416Y2 and one 6416m or AllFrame. A DB9 serial cable connected between

the Yamaha device and the Aviom 6416Y2 card is required to make use of this feature on most consoles. Do not

use a null modem type cable; null modem cables are typically used with RS‑232 communications while serial

cables are used with RS‑422. Place DIP switch #1 in block SW8 in the up position when using a serial cable. (The

down position should be used with a null modem cable only when connected to a PC for firmware updates, etc.)

The LS9 does not require an external DB9 remote control connection as its control data is passed from the console

to the 6416Y2 card internally through the backplane connector that is part of the console’s circuit board at the

rear of the MY expansion card slot. The setting for DIP switch #1 in block SW8 does not affect the LS9.

Remote Control Emulation

Aviom and Yamaha use different remote control architectures, and in order to provide the convenience of console‑

based control, Aviom emulates Yamaha’s remote control scheme and presents remote controllable mic pre

channels as “virtual devices” to the Yamaha console. Yamaha host devices associate external remote controllable

mic preamps, referred to as Head Amp (HA) Devices, with their mini‑YGDAI (MY) expansion card slots.

The most common remote controllable mic preamp connected to these consoles is the Yamaha AD8HR, an

8‑channel device, so remote controllable Aviom channels appear to the console as AD8HR devices in units of 8

channels, and all text and graphics in the Yamaha user interface will refer to external AD8HRs. While each block of

eight channels appears to the console as one virtual device, there is no requirement that the channels originate

on the same 6416m Mic Input Module or AllFrame.

Similarly, there are differences in the functions for which Aviom and Yamaha provide remote control. In addition,

the language used to describe these settings is different. For instance, while Aviom mic preamps can be muted

remotely, Yamaha provides mute control only in the console (i.e., outside the A‑Net network). Users who wish to

have remote control of the Pro64 channel mute at the preamp must use an MCS Mic Control Surface for remote

control. When using m‑control console‑based remote control, the RCI and MCS can still be used with the Pro64

network as an alternative means of providing control and network monitoring. In addition, Pro64 Network

Manager can also simultaneously be used as a control source for all channel‑based functions.

Yamaha displays mic gain settings using a convention that is different from what Aviom and some other

manufacturers use (for example, a range from +10dB (minimum) to ‑62dB (maximum). The exact values vary by

product. These are really just two different ways of displaying the same type of information. Yamaha’s method

shows the level of the incoming signal; for example, when the console HA gain setting is “‑32,” the console is

trying to tell you “the level of your incoming signal is ‑32dB.” On a 6416m, if the corresponding gain readout is

“25,” the 6416m display means “you are adding 25dB of gain to the incoming signal.” Control settings sent from

a Yamaha device will be interpreted by the 6416m automatically and displayed accordingly. There is no need for

the user to make any translations between the two approaches to displaying the data.