Limited x-y mode, Multi-destination mode, Secondary modes – Grass Valley NV9605 v.1.1 User Manual
Page 16: Other nv9605 functions

6
Introduction
Other NV9605 Functions
Limited X-Y Mode
In limited X-Y mode, takes occur from a single selectable source to a single selectable
destination.
If the panel has any level buttons, operators may perform breakaway
—
routing sources on
fewer than all levels.
Pressing a source button completes the take. There is no ‘Take’ button.
Operators can scroll among 4 pages of sources and destinations and use a ‘Source Shift’ button
to toggle between two sets of sources in each page.
Multi-Destination Mode
In this mode, source buttons are configured with destinations as well as sources. Thus, each
source button completes a route to an individual destination. If each button had a different
destination, it would be possible to route to 32 destinations in each of the 4 pages. The typical
configuration would have fewer destinations. The panel uses spacing to separate the left-hand
buttons into 4 groups. The most natural number of destinations would be 4 (per page), but that
is not a requirement.
There is no ‘Take’ button.
Takes are all-level.
Operators can scroll among 4 pages of sources and destinations and use a ‘Source Shift’ button
to toggle between two sets of sources on each page.
Secondary Modes
Additional but secondary modes of panel operation are:
•
Setup mode
—
where the NV9605 is freshly powered up, but disconnected from the net-
work. In this mode, you can preset the NV9605’s panel ID and perform a few diagnostic tasks.
•
Menu mode
—
pressing a menu button places the NV9605 in “menu” mode. In menu mode,
the buttons lose their normal functions and become part of a menu that changes as needed
during menu operation.
When the panel is not in setup mode or menu mode, we say it is in normal mode. “Normal”
means the panel is functioning in one of the 2 operating modes.
Other NV9605 Functions
The NV9605 can be configured to perform the following additional functions:
•
Previous source and free source.
•
System salvos.
•
Lock/protect/release for destinations.
•
Multiple-level breakaways.
•
Broadcast data routing.