ST.RE.E10228.1 Issue 1 ENGLISH (UK) REFERENCE GUIDE RX1290 H.264 Contribution Receiver Software Version 1.0.0 RX1290 H.
Preliminary Pages ENGLISH (UK) ITALIANO READ THIS FIRST! LEGGERE QUESTO AVVISO PER PRIMO! If you do not understand the contents of this manual DO NOT OPERATE THIS EQUIPMENT. Se non si capisce il contenuto del presente manuale NON UTILIZZARE L’APPARECCHIATURA. Also, translation into any EC official language of this manual can be made available, at your cost. È anche disponibile la versione italiana di questo manuale, ma il costo è a carico dell’utente.
Preliminary Pages List of Contents Chapter 1: Introduction This chapter identifies the equipment versions covered by this manual; describes the purpose of the equipment in a typical system; provides a summary of its main features; identifies the controls, indicators and connectors.
Preliminary Pages About This Reference Guide This Reference Guide provides instructions and information for the installation and operation of the RX1290 H.264 Contribution Receiver. This Reference Guide should be kept in a safe place for reference for the life of the equipment. It is not intended that this Reference Guide will be amended by the issue of individual pages. Any revision will be by a complete reissue. Further copies of this Reference Guide can be ordered from the address shown on page vii.
Preliminary Pages Warnings, Cautions and Notes Heed Warnings All warnings on the product and in the operating instructions should be adhered to. The manufacturer can not be held responsible for injuries or damage where warnings and cautions have been ignored or taken lightly. Read Instructions All the safety and operating instructions should be read before this product is operated. Follow Instructions All operating and use instructions should be followed.
Preliminary Pages Contact Information TANDBERG Television Customer Services Support Services Our primary objective is to provide first class customer care that is tailored to your specific business and operational requirements. All levels are supported by one or more service performance reviews to ensure the perfect partnership between TANDBERG Television and your business.
Preliminary Pages Technical Training Training Courses TANDBERG Television provides a wide range of training courses on the operation and maintenance of our products and on their supporting technologies. TANDBERG can provide both regularly scheduled courses and training tailored to individual needs. Courses can be run either at your premises or at one of our dedicated training facilities.
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Chapter 1 1Introduction 1. Contents 1.1 Scope of This Reference Guide ........................ 1-3 1.1.1 Who Should Use This Reference Guide ..................................................... 1-3 1.1.2 What Equipment is Covered by This Reference Guide.................................... 1-3 The Equipment Models .......................... 1-3 Software Version.................................... 1-3 1.2 Summary of Features........................................ 1-4 1.2.1 Main Features ................
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Introduction 1.1 Scope of This Reference Guide 1.1.1 Who Should Use This Reference Guide This Reference Guide is written for operators/users of the RX1290 H.264 Contribution Receiver. It describes the unit’s functions and operation. The Reference Guide is written to assist in the installation and day-to-day care and operation of the unit. Maintenance information requiring the covers to be removed is not included. The RX1290 is referred to throughout this Reference Guide as ‘Contribution Receiver’.
Introduction 1.2 Summary of Features 1.2.1 Main Features The Contribution Receiver is fully compliant with the appropriate sections of the MPEG-21, DVB-S2 and H.264 specifications and offers the following features: • Front Panel Controls and Indications: A vertical split two line x 40 character back-lit dot matrix LCD display with pushbuttons for Up, Down, Left, Right, Edit, and Save to provide information and operator choice entry. LEDs to indicate lock and general alarm conditions.
Introduction • Video Decoding: Maximum Video decoding capability of 90 Mbit/s. • Audio: Audio embedding in the digital video output. • VANC data support: Closed Captions. VITC. ARIB reference spec TR23 • • Frame Synchronisation of video output to a composite analogue input. Local Control Methods: Front Panel User Interface. 1.2.2 Inputs ASI Input (Decoder) One BNC connector supporting both byte-mode and single packet burst mode.
Introduction • RJ-45 high-speed data over Ethernet output (option). Alarm Output A 9-way, D-type connector for interfacing to the alarm and failure monitoring within the Contribution Receiver. This includes a summary alarm signal that coincides with the general front-panel ALARM LED. There is one relay for failure monitoring. The operator can define (using the Alarm Menu pages) which alarm conditions drive the relay. This is described in Chapter 5, Alarms and Annex C, Menus. 1.
Introduction 1.3.2 Input Connections The Satellite Receiver interfaces directly to Low-Noise Block (LNB) and accepts an intermediate frequency (IF) input in the band 950 - 2150 MHz (L-band) for operation in the specified symbol-rate range (see Annex B, Technical Specification). The unit can provide dc power and polarisation switching to the LNB. 1.3.3 What the Satellite Receiver Does The Receiver can be tuned to a specified satellite channel frequency and polarisation.
Introduction 1.4 The Telco Receiver/Decoder 1.4.1 Typical Decoder System The Decoder is a component of TANDBERG Television’s range of equipment. It is designed for use by broadcasters and distributors of video and audio Services. It can be used as a Transport Stream monitor or to decode signals received over a telecommunications network.
Introduction 1.4.2 What the Decoder Does The ASI interface is used to present the Transport Stream in the format required by the internal Decoder circuitry. At this point, the operation of the unit is the same as the Satellite Receiver. The Decoder can be used to receive an input signal from a Public Telecom Network via a Network Adapter Unit (NAU). No error correction is supported at the input of the unit so a level of Quality of Service should be negotiated with the Telecom Network Provider.
Introduction 1.5.2 Front Panel (Local) Modes Operating the Contribution Receiver from the Front Panel is via two main operating modes: Navigate and Edit. See Section 3.3, Front Panel Operating Modes. Timeout (5 minutes) EDIT Off NAVIGATE EDIT EDIT On SAVE Figure 1.6: Front Panel States 1.6 Guided Tour 1.6.1 Construction The Contribution Receiver is constructed using a screened self-ventilated modular system. All operational inputs and outputs are via rear-panel connectors.
Introduction ALARM LED LOCK LED LCD display Edit Save Left Down Up Right Figure 1.7: Front Panel Controls 1.6.3 Front Panel LEDs Figure 1.7 shows the location of the LEDs on the front panel. The LEDs indicate the Contribution Receiver status as follows: The red ALARM LED is used to indicate a Contribution Receiver fault condition, e.g. a missing or faulty input signal. It should be off for correct operation, although it may be lit briefly during power-up.
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Chapter 2 2. Installing the Equipment Contents 2.1 Read This First!................................................. 2-3 2.1.1 Handling................................................. 2-3 2.1.2 Installing the Equipment......................... 2-3 2.1.3 Lifting ..................................................... 2-3 2.1.4 Site Requirements ................................. 2-3 Power Supplies ...................................... 2-3 Environment...........................................
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Installing the Equipment 2.1 Read This First! 2.1.1 Handling The equipment must be handled and installed carefully and thoughtfully to prevent safety hazards and damage. 2.1.2 Installing the Equipment Ensure the personnel designated to fit the unit have the appropriate skills and knowledge. If in any doubt, contact TANDBERG Television Customer Services (see Preliminary Pages for contact details).
Installing the Equipment 2.2 Preliminary Checks 2.2.1 Mechanical Inspection WARNING… REMOVING THE COVERS OF THIS EQUIPMENT MAY INVALIDATE ANY WARRANTIES, CAUSE A SAFETY HAZARD OR/AND AFFECT THE EMC PERFORMANCE. CHECK WITH TANDBERG TELEVISION CUSTOMER SERVICES. Inspect the equipment for damage-in-transit. If in doubt, please contact TANDBERG Television Customer Services (see Preliminary Pages). 2.2.2 Moving the Equipment Safely Do not place this product on an unstable cart, stand, bracket, or table.
Installing the Equipment 2.3 Installing the Equipment 2.3.1 Fixing The equipment is designed for fixed use only and has been shipped with fixing brackets suitable for a standard 19-inch rack. When installed in a rack, it should be secured using the fixing brackets. In addition, support shelves must be used to reduce the weight on the brackets. Ensure it is firmly and safely located and it has an adequate flow of free-air.
Installing the Equipment 2.3.3 Installing Cables - Safety Power supply cables should be routed so that they are not likely to be walked on or pinched by items placed upon or against them. Pay particular attention to cables at plugs, convenience receptacles, and the point where they exit from the appliance. Do not run a.c. power cables in the same duct as signal leads. Do not move or install equipment whilst it is still attached to the mains supply.
Installing the Equipment Supply Inlet Mains Position of the fuse carrier Figure 2.2: AC Power Inlet Assembly NOTE... See Annex B, Technical Specification for fuse information. 2.5.2 AC Power Supply Cord General A two-metre mains supply cord is supplied with this product. It is fitted with a moulded plug suitable for the USA, UK or mainland Europe as advised at the time of ordering. NOTE... The equipment is not fitted with an a.c. power supply ON/OFF switch.
Installing the Equipment 2.6 Protective Earth/Technical Earth 1. 2. WARNINGS... THIS UNIT MUST BE CORRECTLY EARTHED THROUGH THE MOULDED PLUG SUPPLIED. IF THE LOCAL MAINS SUPPLY DOES NOT HAVE AN EARTH CONDUCTOR DO NOT CONNECT THE UNIT. CONTACT CUSTOMER SERVICES FOR ADVICE. BEFORE CONNECTING THE UNIT TO THE SUPPLY, CHECK THE SUPPLY REQUIREMENTS IN ANNEX B. The terminal marked at the rear panel is a Technical Earth. Its use is recommended. This is NOT a protective earth for electric shock protection.
Installing the Equipment 2.7 Signal Connections 2.7.1 General CAUTION... It is strongly recommended that the terminal marked at the rear panel of the equipment is connected to a site Technical Earth before any external connections are made and the equipment is powered. This limits the migration of stray charges. All signal connections are made via the rear panel. A typical rear panel is shown in Figure 2.4. The connections are also shown schematically in Figure 2.
Installing the Equipment RX1290 Contribution Receiver Motherboard RX1290/BAS ASI In Frame Synchronisation RS232/485 10 /100Base-T ASI/HDSDI/SDSDI OUT 1 ASI/HDSDI/SDSDI OUT 2 ASI ASI/HDSDI/SDSDI OUT 3 AUDIO 1 FRAME SYNC AUDIO 2 CVBS OUT REMOTE DATA OUT CONTROL ALARM RELAY AUD 1 ETHERNET AUD 2 AUD 3 AUD 4 RGB HD Transport Stream/Digital Video Output Transport Stream/Digital Video Output Transport Stream/Digital Video Output Analogue/Digital Audio Output Analogue/Digital Audio Output Analogue Video Output
Installing the Equipment 2.7.2 ASI/HD-SDI/SD-SDI OUT The unit has three ASI/SMPTE 292M video (HD-SDI)/656 video (SDSDI) outputs in the standard configuration. The output standard must be selected from the user interface or remote control interface. ASI/HD-SDI/SD-SDI OUT 1/2/3 The ASI/HD-SDI/SD-SDI output is coaxial via BNC connectors. Video control is through the Video Menu (Menu 3.1). Table 2.
Installing the Equipment Table 2.5: Analogue/Digital Audio Connectors Item Specification Connector type 9-way, D-type, Male Connector designations AUDIO 1 AUDIO 2 Pin-outs Pin 1 Digital audio + Pin 2 Ground Pin 3 Left + Pin 4 Right + Pin 5 Ground Pin 6 Digital audio Pin 7 Ground Pin 8 Left Pin 9 Right - Nominal output impedance 50 Ω Maximum data rate 3.072 Mbit/s Analogue Output level +18 dBm nominal clipping level. Selectable in range 12 to +24 dBm.
Installing the Equipment 2.7.5 SVGA Output (RGB HV) 8 1 The EQUIPMENT is equipped with a SVGA 15-pin D-type connector for video output monitoring in the standard configuration. 9 15 The SVGA connector shall be set to RGB/HV (SVGA) or YPrPb under control of the user interface and remote control interfaces. Table 2.7: SVGA Connector 2.7.
Installing the Equipment 2.7.7 Ethernet 8 1 The equipment has an Ethernet remote control port for SNMP Control. This is also used for high-speed data over Ethernet output and TANDBERG engineering debug purposes. 10/100BaseT Table 2.9: Ethernet Pin-outs 2.7.
Installing the Equipment 2.7.10 RS-232 Low-speed Asynchronous Data Output A 9-way, D-type female connector provides a asynchronous low-speed data serial communications interface. The status of the data output on this connector is given in the Data menus (Menus 3.4 and 3.5). 5 1 9 6 DATA Table 2.12: RS-232 Low-speed Data 2.7.
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Chapter 3 3. Operating the Equipment Locally Contents 3.1 Powering the Equipment ................................... 3-3 3.1.1 Switching On.......................................... 3-3 3.1.2 Power-up Operating Modes ................... 3-3 3.2 Front Panel Controls and Pushbuttons.............. 3-4 3.3 Front Panel Operating Modes ........................... 3-4 3.3.1 General .................................................. 3-4 3.3.2 Navigate Mode....................................... 3-4 3.3.
Operating the Equipment Locally Table 3.11: Manually Selecting the Audio Components...... 3-11 Table 3.12: Setting Up Async Data ..................................... 3-11 Table 3.13: Setting Up High-speed Data over Ethernet ...... 3-11 Table 3.14: Setting Up Closed Captions ............................. 3-12 Table 3.15: Setting Up VITC ............................................... 3-12 Table 3.16: Viewing the PCR PID Menu ............................. 3-12 Table 3.17: Viewing the Network ID Menu ........
Operating the Equipment Locally 3.1 Powering the Equipment 3.1.1 Switching On CAUTION... This equipment should not be operated unless the cooling fan is working and there is free-air flow around the unit. Connect the signal inputs and a.c. power supply to the Contribution Receiver and power up the unit. After a short period of initialisation and the Contribution Receiver gaining lock, the unit powers up in Navigate mode. This is the usual operating condition.
Operating the Equipment Locally 3.2 Front Panel Controls and Pushbuttons Front Panel items are described under Section 1.6, Guided Tour. ALARM LED LCD display Edit Save LOCK LED Left Up Down Right Figure 3.2: Front Panel Controls and Pushbuttons 3.3 Front Panel Operating Modes 3.3.1 General Operating the Contribution Receiver from the Front Panel is via two operating modes: Navigate Mode (see Section 3.3.2) and Edit Mode (see Section 3.3.3). 3.3.
Operating the Equipment Locally The Front Panel returns to Navigate mode when Edit is pressed again (abort edit with no save) or when Save is pressed (save modified parameter values). Processing of events from the front panel event queue depends on the current operating mode of the front panel. Table 3.2: Edit Mode Action Result Up Pushbutton Pressed Increases value of current edit parameter by one unit. Down Pushbutton Pressed Decreases value of current edit parameter by one unit.
Operating the Equipment Locally 3.4.3 Entering a Menu Value Some items shown in the right display area of the front panel LCD display have a user-entered value. An example of this is the IP Address (Menu 7.1.3) in which the unit’s Network address has to be entered. Use the following steps as a general guide to entering a value. Table 3.4: Entering a Menu Value Step Action Result 1 Select the menu and display the required selection. 2 Press Edit on the front panel.
Operating the Equipment Locally 3.6 Setting Up the Input (Menu 2) 3.6.1 DVB-S2 Satellite Receiver (TT1290/HWO/DVBS2 and TT1290/HWO/DVBS2/IF/CONST) Table 3.6: Setting Up the DVB-S2 Satellite Receiver Step Action Result 1 Go to Menu 2.3 and select SOURCE 1. The Receiver can take its signals from four sources. Set up source 1. 2 Scroll to Menu 2.3.2. Enter the LNB FREQUENCY then press Save. This sets up the LNB frequency for the selected Source in MHz. 3 Scroll to Menu 2.3.2.1.
Operating the Equipment Locally 3.6.2 Telco Receiver - TTV G.703 Table 3.7 steps through the set up procedure of the Telco Receiver using Menu 2 Input, and the TTV G.703 input. Table 3.7: Setting Up the TTV G.703 Interface Step Action Result 1 Connect the cable to the TTV G.703 input. 2 Power up the unit and navigate to Menu 2 Input. Accesses the Input menu. 3 Press the Right pushbutton to access Menu 2.3. Selects the G.703 menu. 4 Navigate to INTERLEAVER (Menu 2.3.3), then press Edit.
Operating the Equipment Locally 3.6.3 10/100BaseT IP Table 3.8 steps through the set up procedure of the Telco Receiver using Menu 2 Input, and the IP input. Table 3.8: Setting Up the IP Interface Step Action Result 1 Connect the Ethernet cable to the IP input connector. 2 Power up the unit and navigate to Menu 2 Input. Accesses the Input menu. 3 Navigate to UDP PORT (Menu 2.3.2), then press Edit. Edits the UDP Port parameter. Select the Receive UDP Port number, then press Save.
Operating the Equipment Locally 3.7.2 Selecting the Video Component Table 3.10: Selecting the Video Component 3.7.3 Step Action Result 1 Go to Menu 3.1 and press Edit. Select one of the video streams or enter a video stream PID. Selects the video component. 2 Scroll to Menu 3.1.5 and edit the parameter for setting the response to loss of video (FREEZE FRAME, BLACK FRAME, BLUE FRAME, NO SYNCS, 75% BARS AND RED, BLUE PLUS TEXT, RED PLUS TEXT). Press Save. Perform a system restart (see Section 3.
Operating the Equipment Locally Table 3.11: Manually Selecting the Audio Components 3.7.4 Step Action Result 1 Go to the Menu 3.2 and press Edit. Select one of the audio streams or enter an audio PID. Selects the audio component. 2 Scroll to Menu 3.2.3 and edit the Audio 1 delay adjustment (range ± 0 to 49.5ms). Press Save. Edits the Audio 1 delay adjustment. 3 Scroll to Menu 3.2.
Operating the Equipment Locally 3.7.6 Setting Up Closed Captions Table 3.14: Setting Up Closed Captions 3.7.7 Step Action Result 1 Scroll to Menu 3.8.2 and edit the parameter for enabling Closed Captions pass through (ENABLED or DISABLED). Press Save. Edits the parameter for enabling Closed Captions pass-through. Setting Up VITC Table 3.15: Setting Up VITC 3.7.8 Step Action Result 1 Scroll to Menu 3.8.1 and edit the parameter for enabling VITC pass through (ENABLED or DISABLED). Press Save.
Operating the Equipment Locally 3.8.2 Basic Interoperable Scrambling System (BISS) (Menu 4.4) BISS Mode 1 is similar to RAS in that it uses a fixed control word to encrypt the data in the transport stream. Unlike RAS, the scrambling algorithm is non-proprietary, using the DVB Common Scrambling Algorithm to allow interoperability with other manufacturers’ encoding/scrambling equipment. 3.8.3 Remote Authorisation System (RAS) (Menu 4.1) RAS has two levels of operation: FIXED KEY MODE and DSNG KEY MODE.
Operating the Equipment Locally 3.9.2 Step Action Result 2 Press Save to store the choice. The Transport Stream Output (TSO) is now set. Setting the Output Connector Use Table 3.19 to step through the Connector configuration procedure using Menu 5.1. Table 3.19: Setting Up the Output Connector Step Action Result 1 Go to Menu 5.1 to enter the Connector configuration. Edits the Connector output function for BNC connectors 1,2 and 3.
Operating the Equipment Locally 3.10 Setting Up the Alarms (Menu 6) Menu 6 allows a selection of Alarms to be edited. Table 3.21: Setting up the Alarms Step Action Result 1 Go to Menu 6. Accesses the Alarms menu. 2 Scroll to Menu 6.6 and edit the BIT ERROR RATE range (9.9 E-1 to 1.0 E-8) and status (NO ALARM, SET ALARM ONLY). Press Save. Edits the BER alarms menu. 3 Scroll to Menu 6.1 and edit the TRANSPORT Edits the Transport Stream alarms menu. STREAM menu (NO ALARM, SET ALARM ONLY).
Operating the Equipment Locally 3.11 Setting Up System Parameters (Menu 7) This menu gives access to the Setup Menu to set up and edit System Parameters as well as the Contribution Receiver Details menu (see Table 3.23). Table 3.22: Setting Up a System Step Action Result 1 Go to Menu 7. Accesses the System menu. 2 Scroll to Menu 7.1 and edit the Operating Mode (FRONT PANEL, SERIAL REMOTE, NCP or NETWORK (SNMP). Press Save. Edits the Operating Mode menu. 3 Scroll to Menu 7.1.
Operating the Equipment Locally 3.12 Restarting the Unit The System Restart submenu allows the user to reboot the unit without having to remove and insert the power cable. Table 3.24: System Restart Menu Step Action Result 1 Go to Menu 7.3. Accesses the System Restart menu. 2 Press Edit. ACTIVATE will be displayed. 3 Press Save to activate. Unit is restarted. Reference Guide: RX1290 H.264 Contribution Receiver ST.RE.E10228.
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Chapter 4 4. Operating the Equipment Remotely Contents 4.1 Remote Control ................................................. 4-3 4.1.1 Introduction ............................................ 4-3 4.1.2 Remote Protocol Control Documentation....................................... 4-3 4.1.3 Configuring the Unit for Remote Control Via SNMP Port .......................... 4-3 4.1.4 Configuring the Unit For Remote Control Via the Serial Remote Port ....... 4-3 4.1.
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Operating the Equipment Remotely 4.1 Remote Control 4.1.1 Introduction The Contribution Receiver can be remotely controlled in a variety of ways. The basic control methods are: • • • • TANDBERG Device Controller (TDC) Third-party application using TANDBERG SNMP MIB protocol Third-party application using Alteia remote control protocol (RS-232/RS-485) TANDBERG Director (over-air) Common for all control methods is that the Contribution Receiver needs to be set up to accept the remote control handling.
Operating the Equipment Remotely Table 4.2: Configuring the Serial Remote Port and Activating Remote Protocol Step Action Result 1. Go to menu 7.1. Displays ‘OPERATING MODE’. 2. Press Edit. Displays ‘FRONT PANEL’. 3. Press the down pushbutton and select ‘SERIAL REMOTE’. The settings should be set to match the external control host. 4. Press Save. The unit is ready for Remote Control.
Operating the Equipment Remotely Entering the OAC Lockout PIN Table 4.4: Entering the OAC Lockout PIN 4.2 Step Action Result 1. Go to menu #4.3.6 DIRECTOR. Displays ‘NCP LOCK OVERRIDE PIN’. 2. Press Edit. Displays ‘ENTER CURRENT PIN’. 3. Enter the four-digit PIN and press Save. The unit is ready for local control. Returning the Unit to Local Control Mode Once the unit is in remote control mode, no local controls are available.
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Chapter 5 Alarms 5. Contents 5.1 Introduction ....................................................... 5-3 5.2 Location of the Alarm and Lock LEDs ............... 5-3 List of Figures Figure 5.1: Front Panel LEDs ............................................... 5-3 5.3 ALARM LED...................................................... 5-3 Reference Guide: RX1290 H.264 Contribution Receiver ST.RE.E10228.
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Alarms 5.1 Introduction There are two Front Panel LEDs that indicate the status of the Contribution Receiver. These are used to indicate abnormal performance of the unit. 5.2 Location of the Alarm and Lock LEDs The red ALARM LED is used to indicate an equipment fault condition, for example a missing or faulty input signal. It should be off during correct operation, although it may be lit briefly during power-up.
Alarms It is possible to signal additional alarms depending on the Transport Stream input type and optional functionality in the unit. Satellite inputs: • • • Page 5-4 Bit Error Rate (BER) above (programmable) threshold. Modulation Error Ratio (MER) above (programmable) threshold. EBNO Reference Guide: RX1290 H.264 Contribution Receiver ST.RE.E10228.
Chapter 6 6. Options Contents 6.1 Hardware Enabled Options ............................... 6-3 6.2 DVB-S2 Input Cards (RX1290/HWO/DVBS2 and RX1290/HWO/DVBS2/IF/CONST)............. 6-3 6.2.1 General .................................................. 6-3 6.2.2 Connector Details - L-Band Inputs ......... 6-3 6.2.3 Connector Details – IF Monitor Input (RX1290/HWO/DVBS2/IF/CONST) ....... 6-3 6.2.4 Connector Details – Constellation Output (RX1290/HWO/DVBS2/IF/CONST) ....... 6-4 List of Tables Table 6.
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Options 6.1 Hardware Enabled Options These options require extra hardware to be fitted to the unit. Contact the Customer Services Helpdesk for details (see Preliminary Pages). 6.2 DVB-S2 Input Cards (RX1290/HWO/DVBS2 and RX1290/HWO/DVBS2/IF/CONST) 6.2.1 General The DVB-S2 Input card supports DVB-S, QPSK demodulation and DVB-S2, QPSK and 8PSK demodulation. Two options are available.
Options This monitor input is designed to give error free demodulation in the presence of a wanted carrier only, for example when being fed directly from a satellite modulator. The specification for this connector is given in Annex B, Technical Specification. Table 6.2: DVB-S2 Satellite Receiver (IF Monitor Input) Connector 6.2.
Options Careful consideration needs to be taken to ensure interoperability with the transmitting equipment. 6.5 Dolby Digital Decoder (RX1290/SWO/AC3) The Contribution Receiver can be enabled through a licence key to apply Dolby Digital decoding functionality. 6.6 RAS Mode 1 Conditional Access (RX1290/SWO/RAS) This option enables RAS Mode 1 conditional access descrambling. 6.7 RAS Mode 2 Conditional Access (RX1290/SWO/RAS2) This option enables RAS Mode 2 conditional access descrambling. 6.
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Chapter 7 7. Preventive Maintenance and Faultfinding Contents 7.1 Routine Checks................................................. 7-3 7.1.1 Cooling Fans.......................................... 7-3 7.1.2 Cleaning................................................. 7-3 List of Figures 7.2 Servicing ........................................................... 7-3 7.2.1 Conditions Requiring Servicing .............. 7-3 7.2.2 Replacement Parts ................................ 7-4 7.2.
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Preventive Maintenance and Fault-finding 7.1 Routine Checks 7.1.1 Cooling Fans There are no routine checks associated with this equipment other than to ensure that the unit is adequately cooled. This equipment must never be operated unless the cooling fans are working. They should be checked periodically. CAUTION... The fan contained within this unit is not fitted with an insect/dust filter. Pay particular attention to the environment in which it is going to be used.
Preventive Maintenance and Fault-finding 7.2.2 6. When the product exhibits a distinct change in performance. 7. If the equipment has been subject to a lightning strike or power surge. Replacement Parts When replacement parts are required, be sure only parts specified by TANDBERG Television Ltd (or having the same characteristics as the original part) have been used. Unauthorised substitutions may result in fire, electric shock or other hazards. 7.2.
Preventive Maintenance and Fault-finding 7.4 Fault-finding 7.4.1 General The information contained in this chapter is intended to isolate the unit as the faulty equipment if a system failure occurs. If the following information fails to clear the abnormal condition, please contact Customer Services using the information given in the Preliminary Pages of this manual. 7.4.2 System Defaults The system defaults can be restored at any time using the Restore System Defaults option (Menu 7.1.4). 7.4.3 7.4.
Preventive Maintenance and Fault-finding 7.5 AC User Accessible Fuse Replacement CAUTION... This product should be operated only from the type of power source indicated on the marking label. If you are not sure of the type of power supply to your home or business, consult your appliance dealer or local power company. For products intended to operate from battery power, or other sources, refer to the operating instructions.
Preventive Maintenance and Fault-finding If the replacement fuse also blows, do not continue. Disconnect the equipment and contact TANDBERG Customer Services (see Preliminary Pages) for advice. 7.6 Disposal 7.6.1 Moulded Plugs If the moulded plug fitted to the mains cable supplied with this equipment is not required, use another cable. If the supplied plug is to be changed, cut it off and dispose of it safely. WARNING...
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Annex A A. Glossary The following list covers most of the abbreviations, acronyms and terms as used in TANDBERG Television Limited Manuals, User and Reference Guides. All terms may not be included in this Reference Guide. µm Micrometre (former name - micron): a unit of length equal to one millionth (10-6) of a metre. 3:2 pulldown A technique used when converting film material (which operates at 24 pictures per second) to 525-line video (operating at 30 pictures per second).
Glossary ATM Asynchronous Transfer Mode: A connection orientated, cell based, data transport technology designed for Broadband ISDN (B-ISDN). It provides a circuit-switched bandwidthon-demand carrier system, with the flexibility of packet switching. It offers low end-to-end delays and (negotiable on call set-up) Quality of Service guarantees. Asynchronous refers to the sporadic nature of the data being transmitted.
Glossary C-Band The portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, which spans the frequency range of approximately 4 GHz to 6 GHz. Used by communications satellites. Preferred in tropical climates because it is not susceptible to fading. CCIR See: ITU-R. CCITT See: ITU-T. Channel A narrow range of frequencies, part of a frequency band, for the transmission of radio and television signals without interference from other channels.
Glossary DCE Data Communications Equipment: Typically a modem. It establishes, maintains and terminates a session on a network but in itself is not the source (originator) or destination (end receiving unit) of signals (e.g. a computer, see DTE). A DCE device may also convert signals to comply with the transmission path (network) format. DCT Discrete Cosine Transform: A technique for expressing a waveform as a weighted sum of cosines. Raw video data is not readily compressible.
Glossary Earth Technical Earth: Ensures that all equipment chassis within a rack are at the same potential, usually by connecting a wire between the Technical earth terminal and a suitable point on the rack. This is sometimes known as a Functional earth. Protective Earth: Used for electric shock protection. This is sometimes known as a safety earth. EBU European Broadcast Union. ECM Entitlement Control Message. EDI Ethernet Data Input EIA Electronics Industries Association (USA).
Glossary FTP File Transfer Protocol: A protocol used to transfer files over a TCP/IP network (Internet, UNIX, etc.). For example, after developing the HTML pages for a Web site on a local machine, they are typically uploaded to the Web server, using FTP. Unlike e-mail programs in which graphics and program files have to be attached, FTP is designed to handle binary files directly and does not add the overhead of encoding and decoding the data. G.
Glossary IRD Integrated Receiver Decoder: The Receiver with an internal MPEG Decoder, which is connected to the subscriber’s TV. The IRD is responsible for receiving and de-multiplexing all signals. The unit receives the incoming signal and if CA is active, decodes the signal when provided with a control word by the viewing card. Domestic IRDs are also known as Set-Top Units or Set-Top Boxes.
Glossary LVDS Low Voltage Differential Signal: LVDS is a generic multi-purpose Interface standard for high speed / low power data transmission. It was standardised in ANSI/TIA/EIA-644-1995 Standard (aka RS-644). Macroblock A 16x16-pixel area of the TV picture. Most processing within the MPEG domain takes place with macro blocks. These are converted to four 8x8 blocks using either frame DCT or field DCT.
Glossary Network In the context of broadcasting: a collection of MPEG-2 transport stream multiplexes transmitted on a single delivery system, for example, all digital channels on a specific cable system. NICAM Near Instantaneously Companded Audio Multiplex: Official name is NICAM 728. Used for digital stereo sound broadcasting in the UK employing compression techniques to deliver very near CD quality audio. 728 refers to the bit-rate in kbit/s.
Glossary Pel Picture Element: Also known as a pixel. The smallest resolvable rectangular area of an image either on a screen or stored in memory. On screen, pixels are made up of one or more dots of colour. Monochrome and grey-scale systems use one dot per pixel. For grey-scale, the pixel is energised with different intensities, creating a range from dark to light (a scale of 0-255 for an eight-bit pixel).
Glossary PSI Program Specific Information: Consists of normative data, which is necessary for the demultiplexing of transport streams and the successful regeneration of programs. (See also: SI). PSIP Program System Information Protocol: The ATSC equivalent of SI for DVB. PSK Phase Shift Keying: A method of modulating digital signals particularly suited to satellite transmission. PSR Professional Satellite Receiver: See also: IRD. PSU Power Supply Unit.
Glossary SFN Single Frequency Network: The SFN technique allows large geographic areas to be served with a common transmission multiplex. All transmitters in the network are synchronously modulated with the same signal and they all radiate on the same frequency. Due to the multipath capability of the multi-carrier transmission system (COFDM), signals from several transmitters arriving at a receiving antenna may contribute constructively to the total wanted signal.
Glossary TOT Time Offset Table: This optional SI table supports the use of local offsets as well as the UTC time/date combination. The purpose of the table is to list by country the current offset from UTC and the next expected change to that offset (to track when daylight saving occurs). The offset resolution is to within 1 minute over a range of ±12 hours from UTC.
Glossary BLANK Page A-14 Reference Guide: RX1290 H.264 Contribution Receiver ST.RE.E10228.
Annex B B. Technical Specification Contents B.1 Output ...............................................................B-3 B.1.1 Supported Video Resolutions.................B-3 B.1.2 Supported Video Bit-rates ......................B-3 B.1.3 Composite Video Output........................B-4 B.1.4 Performance Figures .............................B-5 B.1.5 HD SDI...................................................B-6 B.2 Audio Decoding and Output Stage....................B-6 B.2.1 General .....................
Technical Specification Connector............................................................B-15 Table B.22: RS-232 Asynchronous (Low-speed) Data Connector............................................................B-16 Table B.23: High-speed Data Over Ethernet Connector .....B-16 Table B.24: SNMP Control Connector ................................B-17 Table B.25: Relay Alarm Output Specification ....................B-17 Page B-2 Table B.26: Environmental Conditions ...............................
Technical Specification B.1 Output B.1.1 Supported Video Resolutions The Contribution Receiver supports H.264, 4:2:0 and 4:2:2. Table B.1: Supported Video Resolutions Input Resolutions (H x V) Frame Rates Output Format (H x V) Specification 1920 x 1080 23.976 1920 x 1080 SF SMPTE RP211 1440 x 1080 24 1920 x 1080 interlaced SMPTE 274M 1280 x 720 progressive SMPTE 296M 720 x 512 interlaced SMPTE 174M 1280 x 1080 960 x 1080 1920 x 1080 25 1440 x 1080 29.
Technical Specification B.1.3 Composite Video Output The equipment supports video decoding as per ITU-R BT.470 and ANSI/SMPTE 170M. Table B.3: 625 Line Description Test Signal Limit Bar Level VITS17 700mV +/- 7mV Bar Tilt VITS17 <0.
Technical Specification Description Test Signal Limit Differential Phase NTC-7 comp <1 Degree Non Linearity NTC-7 comp <5% Jitter B.1.4 <5nS Weighted Luminance Noise Luminance Ramp <60 dB Weighted Luminance Noise Flat Grey Field <63 dB Chrominance PM Noise Flat Red Field <55 dB Performance Figures Table B.
Technical Specification B.1.5 HD SDI HD SDI output supports: • • • • Embedded Decoded Audios Closed Captioning (EIA 708B) VITC VANC B.2 Audio Decoding and Output Stage B.2.1 General • The Contribution Receiver is capable of simultaneously decoding four PES streams of audio from the transport stream. Each of the decoders is identical in operation, but act completely independently of the other.
Technical Specification Sampling rate (kHz): 48 Maximum compressed data rate: 640 kbit/s NOTE… Support for Dolby Digital decoding requires approval and licensing from Dolby. The Contribution Receiver is able to receive audio data in the form of linear PCM digital audio data, up to 20 bits in resolution, and makes it available for output as either analogue or digital audio. B.2.4 DTS Audio The Contribution Receiver is able to detect DTS audio Modes 1, 2 or 3.
Technical Specification Table B.7: Analogue Audio Performance Specifications Parameter Specification Output connector Male 9 pin D-sub Output format Balanced Bit-rates 32 kbit/s to 384 kbit/s Sampling rates 48 KHz Nominal Output Level 0dBu +/- 0.1 dB in 20 kΩ Output impedance: <20kΩ Clipping Level 12 dBFS – 24 dBFS (step size 1dB) Frequency Response 48kHz +/- 0.5 dB (20Hz – 20 kHz THD+N at 8dB 100 Hz <-70 dB 1 kHz <-70 dB 100 Hz <-70 dB 1 kHz <-70 dB 6.
Technical Specification The lip sync delay between stereo pair 1 and 2 is ±2 ms because the PTS will be presented independently for each pair. When using frame sync the lip sync error is up to 40 ms due to audio frame skip and repeats. B.3.5 Supported Audio Specifications Table B.8: Supported Audio Specifications B.3.6 Specification Description ISO/IEC 13818-3 Generic Coding of Moving Pictures and Associated Information: (MPEG-2) Audio. ATSC A-52 Digital Audio Compression Standard (Dolby Digital).
Technical Specification B.4 Input Specifications B.4.1 DVB-S2 Satellite Receivers General Table B.
Technical Specification Parameter Specification DVB-S2 Modulation (EN 302 307) DVB-S2 Mode Broadcast Services Modulation QPSK, 8PSK QPSK LDPC FEC rates 1/2, 3/5, 2/3, 3/4, 4/5, 5/6, 8/9.
Technical Specification Eb/No ratio is referred to user bit-rate Ru188. See EN 300 421 specification. For more detailed specification information and advice on performance in specific applications, please contact TANDBERG Television Customer Services. Table B.12: DVB-S2 Satellite Receiver Input – DVB-S2 Es/No Ratio LDPC FEC Rate DVB-S2 Theoretical6 Es/No Ratio (dB) in perfect linear channel for correct MPEG-2 system operation 1/2 QPSK 1.00 3/5 QPSK 2.23 2/3 QPSK 3.10 3/4 QPSK 4.03 4/5 QPSK 4.
Technical Specification Table B.13: LNB Power and Control Parameter Specification Voltage V (nominal) Receiver Polarisation7 13 Vertical/circular right 18 Horizontal/circular left Voltage B.4.2 Current 350 mA maximum LNB control 22 ± 2 kHz tone Tone amplitude 0.65 ±0.2 Vp-p Boost voltage 1 V typical DVB-ASI Input Table B.14: DVB-ASI Copper B.4.3 Input Specification Safety status SELV Connector type BNC, Female Input impedance 75 Ω Data rate range 0.
Technical Specification B.5 Output Specifications B.5.1 Video Outputs Analogue HD Video Table B.16: Analogue Video Output Connectors Item Specification Safety status SELV Connector type 15-way D-type Connector designation Video Out Video standards 1080 interlaced Video level (luminance) 700 mV ± 30 mV Digital Video Table B.
Technical Specification Description Test Signal Limit Differential Phase VITS330 <1 Degree Non Linearity VITS17 <5% Jitter VITS17 <5nS Weighted Luminance Noise Luminance Ramp <60 dB Weighted Luminance Noise Flat Grey Field <63 dB Chrominance PM Noise Flat Red Field <55 dB Description Test Signal Limit Bar Level NTC-7 comp 100 IRE +/- 1 IRE Bar Tilt NTC-7 comp <0.5% Sync Level NTC-7 comp 40 IRE +/- 0.
Technical Specification Item Specification Safety status SELV Connector type 2 x 9-Way D-type Connector designation AUDIO 1 AUDIO 2 Output level +18 dBm nominal clipping level. Selectable in range 12 to +24 dBm. B.5.3 Nominal output impedance 50 Ω Load impedance ≥600 Ω Compressions layers MPEG-2 layer 1 and 2, linear audio and Dolby Digital (AC-3) Sampling rates 48 kHz Output formats Analogue, AES3 and Dolby Digital AC-3 Data Outputs RS-232 Asynchronous (Low-speed) Data Table B.
Technical Specification B.5.4 SNMP Remote Control Connector Table B.24: SNMP Control Connector B.5.5 Item Specification Safety status SELV Connector type RJ-45 (100BaseT) Connector designation 10/100BaseT Standard TANDBERG SNMP Control MIB Alarm Connector Table B.25: Relay Alarm Output Specification Item Specification Safety status SELV Connector type 9-way D-type female Connector designation: ALARM Contact Configuration SPDT (Change-over) All volt-free contacts, fully isolated.
Technical Specification B.6 Environmental B.6.1 Conditions Table B.26: Environmental Conditions Operational Specification Temperature 0°C to +50°C ambient air temperature with free airflow Humidity 0% to 95% (non-condensing) Cooling requirements Convection cooling/free airflow Handling/movement Fixed (non-mobile) use only Storage/Transportation B.6.2 Temperature -20°C to +70°C (-4°F to +158°F) Humidity 0% to 95% (non-condensing) Physical Table B.
Technical Specification B.7 Power Supply - AC Mains Input This equipment is fitted with a wide-ranging power supply. It is suitable for supply voltages of 100-240 Vac -10% +6% at 50/60 Hz nominal. Table B.28: AC Power Supply Specification Item Specification Power distribution system Type TN ONLY (EN 60950 para 1.2.12.1): Power distribution system having one point directly earthed, the exposed conductive parts of the installation being connected to that point by protective earth conductors.
Technical Specification B.9 Compliance8 B.9.1 Safety This equipment has been designed and tested to meet the requirements of the following: EN 60950-1 European Information technology equipment - Safety. IEC 60950-1 International Information technology equipment - Safety. In addition, the equipment has been designed to meet the following: UL 60950-1 B.9.2 USA Information Technology Equipment - Safety.
Technical Specification B.9.3 CE Marking The CE mark is affixed to indicate compliance with the following directives: 89/336/EEC of 3 May 1989 on the approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to electromagnetic compatibility. 73/23/EEC of 19 February 1973 on the harmonisation of the laws of the Member States relating to electrical equipment designed for use within certain voltage limits.
Technical Specification BLANK Page B-22 Reference Guide: RX1290 H.264 Contribution Receiver ST.RE.E10228.
Annex C C. Menus Contents C.1 LCD Menus ...................................................... C-3 C.1.1 Using the Menus ................................... C-3 C.1.2 Menu Descriptions ................................ C-3 C.2 Menu Pages - Main Menu ................................ C-3 C.3 The Menu Structure ......................................... C-4 C.4 Presets Menu Items (Menu 1) .......................... C-5 C.5 Input Status Menu (Menu 2)............................. C-5 C.5.1 Overview..............
Menus Table C.17: Transport Stream Output Menu ...................... C-13 Table C.18: Output Connector Selector Submenu............. C-13 Table C.19: Alarms Menu................................................... C-14 Table C.20: Transport Stream Alarm Setup Menu ............. C-14 Table C.21: Video Alarm Setup Menu................................ C-14 Table C.22: Audio 1 Alarm Setup Menu............................. C-14 Table C.23: Audio 2 Alarm Setup Menu............................. C-15 Table C.
Menus C.1 LCD Menus C.1.1 Using the Menus Detailed description of the use of menus is given in Chapter 3, Operating the Equipment Locally. C.1.2 Menu Descriptions This annex describes the front panel LCD menus. When the unit is first powered up, it progresses through a series of start-up pages on the LCD display. The menu is created in a tree structure, where each branch may contain items, new branches, or both.
Menus C.3 The Menu Structure Switch ON Boot Screen RX1290 1 Preset Menu 2 Input Menu 3 Service Menu 4 Conditional Access Menu 5 TS Output Menu 6 Alarms Menu 7 System Menu 7. System 7 Date/Time 7.1 Setup Operating Mode 7.1.1 LCD Contrast 7.1.2 Serial Remote Protocol 7.1.3 IP Address 7.1.3.1 Subnet Mask 7.1.3.2 Gateway Address 7.1.4 Restore System Defaults 7.1.5 Service Hunt Mode 7.1.6 SI Mode 7.1.7 Customisation Key 7.2 IRD Details Electronic Serial No. 7.2.1 Software Version 7.2.2 Firmware Version 7.2.
Menus C.4 Presets Menu Items (Menu 1) The Presets menu contains up to 40 editable preset numbers in the range 01 – 40. Selecting a Service via the Presets menu automatically reconfigures the input of the Contribution Receiver. Each preset can have a selected language, network name and service provider associated with it. Table C.
Menus C.5.3 DVB-S2 Option DVB-S2 Input Option (RX1290/HWO/DVBS2 or RX1290/HWO/DVBS2/IF/CONST) When a DVB-S2 interface is used, the Input menu allows the user to edit the parameters. Table C.
Menus C.6 Conditional Access Menu C.6.1 Overview The CA Menu allows the user to enter the various keys required for the different scrambling modes. C.6.2 RAS Mode Allows the user to select between DSNG KEY MODE and FIXED KEY MODE C.6.3 DISPLAY DESCRIPTION CA RAS DSNG KEY MODE KEY XXXXXXX XXXXXXX is the DSNG Key Common Interface DISPLAY DESCRIPTION COMMON INTERFACE DISPLAY XXXX XXXX display CI card detected (Displays information about common interface card inserted) C.6.
Menus C.6.5 C.6.6 CA Mode DISPLAY DESCRIPTION CA MODE X BISS KEY YYYYYYYYYYYY X is CA mode to be selected YY is the BISS KEY USER ID ONE BISS XXXXXXXXXXXX XXX is the BISS KEY USER ID TWO BISS XXXXXXXXXXXX XXX is the BISS KEY CA Provider Lock DISPLAY DESCRIPTION PROVIDER ID XXXXXXX XX Provider ID Key C.7 Service Menu (Menu 3) C.7.1 Overview The Service menu allows access to the currently available services.
Menus C.7.2 Display Title: Service Description Section PCR PID The PCR PID submenu displays the Program Clock Reference packet identifier and its status. C.7.10 Network ID The Network ID submenu displays the network ID and the Original Network ID from the current Service Description Tables. C.7.11 Video Menu The Video signal status submenu contains information about the currently decoded MPEG-2 video. Table C.
Menus C.7.3 Audio 1 Menu The Audio 1 signal status submenu contains information about the audio format and status of the currently decoded audio stream on the primary audio output. Table C.8: Audio 1 Menu Display Title: Audio 01 Description XX Streams PID YYYY WWWW WWWW W VVV ZZZZ YYYY is the currently selected audio1 PID ZZZZ is the stream status (OK, STOP, FAIL) VVV is the audio layer (MUS, LIN, DD) WWWWWWW is the audio language Sampling Rate XX.X kHz XX.
Menus C.7.5 Audio 3 Menu The Audio 3 signal status submenu contains information about the audio format and status of the currently decoded audio stream on the secondary audio output. Table C.10: Audio 3 Menu Display Title: Audio 02 Description XX Streams PID YYYY WWWW WWWW W VVV ZZZZ YYYY is the currently selected audio3 PID ZZZZ is the stream status (OK, STOP, FAIL) VVV is the audio layer (MUS, LIN, DD) WWWWWWW is the audio language Sampling Rate XX.X kHz XX.
Menus C.7.7 Async Data Menu The Async Data submenu allows status monitoring and configuration of the low speed data. Table C.
Menus C.7.10 PCR PID Menu The PCR PID submenu displays the Program Clock Reference packet identifier and its status. Table C.15: PCR PID Menu C.7.11 Display Title: PCR PID Description PCR PID XXXX XXXX is the PCR PID YYYYYYYYYY YYYYYYYYYY is (PRESENT, NOT PRESENT) Network ID Menu The Network ID submenu displays the network ID and the Original Network ID from the current Service Description Tables. Table C.
Menus C.9 Alarms Menu (Menu 6) C.9.1 Overview The Alarms menu provides a summary of the alarm status. Table C.19: Alarms Menu C.9.2 Display Title: Alarms Description Section Transport Stream Alarm Setup Transport Stream alarm and relay settings. C.9.2 Video Alarm Setup Video alarm and relay settings. C.9.3 Audio 1 Alarm Setup Audio 1 alarm and relay settings. C.9.4 Audio 2 Alarm Setup Audio 2 alarm and relay settings. C.9.5 Audio 3 Alarm Setup Audio 3 alarm and relay settings. C.9.
Menus C.9.5 Audio 2 Alarm Setup Menu Table C.23: Audio 2 Alarm Setup Menu Display Title: Description IF AUDIO 02 NOT RUNNING YYYYYYYYYYYYYY is editable: YYYYYYYYYYYYYY NO ALARM SET ALARM ONLY C.9.6 Audio 3 Alarm Setup Menu Table C.24: Audio 3 Alarm Setup Menu Display Title: Description IF AUDIO 03 NOT RUNNING YYYYYYYYYYYYYY is editable: YYYYYYYYYYYYYY NO ALARM SET ALARM ONLY C.9.7 Audio 4 Alarm Setup Menu Table C.
Menus C.9.9 MER Alarm Setup Menu Table C.27: MER Alarm Setup Menu Display Title: Description IF MER LESS THAN XX.X YYYYYYYYYYYYYY is editable 0 to 69.9: YYYYYYYYYYYYYY NO ALARM SET ALARM ONLY C.9.10 EBNO Alarm Setup Menu Table C.28: EBNO Alarm Setup Menu Display Title: Description IF EBNO LESS THAN XX.X YYYYYYYYYYYYYY is editable 0 to 69.9: YYYYYYYYYYYYYY NO ALARM SET ALARM ONLY C.9.11 Temperature Alarm Setup Menu Table C.
Menus C.10 System Menu (Menu 7) C.10.1 Setup Menu The Setup submenu allows the user to edit the operating mode, LCD contrast, serial remote protocol, IP address, subnet mask, service hunt mode, and the customisation key. Table C.
Menus C.10.2 Contribution Receiver Details Menu The Contribution Receiver Details submenu displays the software, firmware, hardware, PLD version and electronic serial number of the CR. Table C.31: CR Details Menu Display Title: CR Details Description Electronic Serial Number XXXXX is the unit serial number XXXXX Software Version XX.XX.XX is the software version number XX.XX.XX Firmware Versions XX.XX is the firmware 1 version number XX.XX XX.
Annex D Language Abbreviations D. Languages are shown in alphabetical order.
Annex D - Languages The following non-ISO1 languages are supported. NOTE… Only applicable for a transport stream going to an Alteia Receiver.
Annex E Factory Defaults E. Units are shipped with the following factory default parameters. These can be restored at any time using the System Menu. All other parameters are unaffected by restoring the factory defaults. Menu Description Default #2 Input SELECT INPUT ASI #2 Input QPSK/8PSK/16QAM SOURCE 1 LNB FREQUENCY 10750.0 MHz SATELLITE FREQUENCY 12168.0 MHz SYMBOL RATE 27.
Factory Defaults Menu Description Default CLIPPING LEVEL 18 dB AC3 DOWNMIX METHOD SURROUND STEREO ASYNC DATA ENABLED SYNC DATA (High Speed Ethernet Data Not Fitted) ENABLED ETH.