Analog In – DCIO/DCIO-H
The Analog Input for the DCIO (and DCIO-H) has two line-level inputs and an input for a microphone. The connectors are physically part of the DCIO. The Analog Input converts the input signal to processed digital and provides software controls before and after the convertor. Connection for the Mike / Line input is provided via a standard three-conductor XLR connector with balanced input, phantom power available in Q-SYS Designer. Used for: mono, non-sync sources including microphone for in-auditorium announcements, and SPL metering. In addition to the XLR, a standard 3.5mm TRS jack, unbalanced, stereo, analog, line-input.
DCIO-H Properties Analog In
Name
The Name may contain ASCII letters 'a' through 'z' (case-insensitive), the digits '0' through '9', and the hyphen. Names cannot begin or end with a hyphen. No other symbols, punctuation characters, or blank spaces are permitted.
Note: This name must match the Hostname for the device as defined in Core Manager or Peripheral Manager.
Location
User-defined name that groups the component with other components in the same physical location – for example, "Rack 1" – or in the same organizational scheme.
Is Network Redundant
Select whether the device is connected to redundant networks.
Is Required
When enabled, and the device is not found on the network, the device is reported as 'Missing', which is an error condition. This is the default behavior. When disabled, and the device is not found on the network, the device is reported as 'Not Present', which is not an error condition.
Dynamically Paired
Indicates that this virtual component can be paired with the same type of hardware without changing the network ID of the hardware or the name of this component. Refer to the Q-SYS Core Manager Dynamic Pairing topic for more information. The default is 'No'.
Graphic Properties
Label
Use the Label property to change the name of the component in the schematic. The Label property defaults to the component name. To learn more about renaming schematic elements, see Organizing Your Design.
Position
The coordinates reference a specific place in the schematic - for example,"100,100" (horizontal, vertical). 0,0 is the upper left corner of the schematic.
Fill
Sets the fill color of the component in the schematic.
Script Access Properties
Code Name
Displays the currently assign name for control access. You can use the auto-assigned name or customize it. Q-SYS will automatically check all Code Names in the design to ensure name is unique.
Script Access
Defines whether the component will be accessible by script and/or externally, or not at all. Choices include All, External, None (default), and Script.
- None (default) - Not accessible by any script, plugin, or by Q-SYS Remote Control Protocol (QRC).
- Script - Can be accessed by scripts, such as Text Controller, Block Controllers, and plugins only.
- External - Can only be accessed by 3rd party controls systems using component commands from the Q-SYS Remote Control Protocol (QRC).
- All - No restrictions, can be accessed by 3rd party control systems via Q-SYS Remote Control Protocol (QRC), or script objects or plugin objects.
Tip: Use Script Programmer Mode to quickly view the Script Access setting directly on the component in the design schematic without the need to disconnect from the Q-SYS Core processor.
Analog
Peak Input Level (dBFS)
Meters for each channel indicating the peak analog input level. The measurement is taken after the A/D converter, but before the Digital Gain. Use this meter in conjunction with the Max Input Level to obtain an input signal as close to 0 dBFS as possible without actually clipping.
Clip
Red LED indicating if the signal is being clipped.
Clip Hold
Holds the clip indication until manually cleared.
Phantom Power
Toggle turning on and off phantom power (+15VDC) to the microphone. Not available for the Line Inputs.
Preamp Sensitivity (dBu)
The maximum analog level, coming into the Analog Input, that can be converted without clipping. This level is typically set slightly higher than the source's output level, so that the Peak Input Level reads about 0 dBFS without actually clipping.
You can select the field and enter the value you want, or click and drag the number to the value.
Varies inversely with the Preamp Gain.
Preamp Gain knob (Mic Only) (dB)
The amount of Gain applied to the incoming analog signal level. Varies inversely with the Preamp Sensitivity.
Preamp Gain Buttons (Line Only)
The amount of Gain applied to the incoming analog signal level.
Left and Right toggle buttons toggle the Preamp Gain between 0dB when Off, and 12dB when On. this results in a change in Preamp Sensitivity.
Toggle Button |
Preamp Gain |
Preamp Sensitivity |
Off |
0dB |
15dBu |
On |
12dB |
3dBu |
The values of 0dB and 12dB can be seen by connecting a Custom Controls "Text Display" to the Preamp Gain control pin output.
Digital
Invert
Toggle button to invert the digital output of Analog Input.
Mute
Toggle button to mute and unmute the output signal.
Gain (dB)
Controls the Gain of the digital output signal. Range is between -100 and 20 dB.
Status
Status LED
This LED changes color to indicate the current status of the Core. See Status for the meanings of the various colors.
Component status is conveyed with the Status LED and Status box, which uses both color and text to indicate the current condition:
- OK: The device is functioning normally.
- Initializing: The device is in the process of a firmware or configuration update, or the design is starting.
- Compromised: The device is functioning, but a non-fatal problem exists. Refer to the Status box for details.
- Missing: The device cannot be discovered.
- Fault: The device is malfunctioning or is not properly configured. Refer to the Status box for details.
- Unknown: This status appears during a Core reboot (for example, during a firmware update), or when a design is being uploaded to the Core and before it has started running.
- Not Present: If applicable to the device, this status appears when the device is not connected to the network and its Is Required component property is set to 'No'. This status also appears if the device component's Dynamically Paired property is set to 'Yes', pairing has not been assigned in Core Manager, and the device component's Is Required property is set to 'Yes'. See Dynamic Pairing.
The Analog Input has the following Control Pins.
Pin Name |
Value |
String |
Position |
Pins Available |
---|---|---|---|---|
Clip |
0 1 |
false true |
0 1 |
Output |
Clip Hold |
0 1 |
false true |
0 1 |
Input / Output |
Level |
≈ -100 to 20 |
≈ -100 dB to 20 dB |
0 to 1.00 |
Output |
Gain |
-100 to 20 |
-100 dB to 20 dB |
0. to 1.00 |
Input / Output |
Invert |
0 1 |
normal invert |
0 1 |
Input / Output |
Mute |
0 1 |
unmute mute |
0 1 |
Input / Output |
Phantom Power |
0 1 |
disable enable |
0 1 |
Input / Output |
Preamp Gain Mic Channel Left / Right Channel (dB) |
0 to 58 0 or 12
|
0dB to 58dB 0dB or 12dB |
0 to 1.00 0 to 1.00 |
Input / Output Input / Output |
Preamp Sensitivity (dBu) |
+26 to -32 |
+26dBu to -32dBu |
0 to 1.00 |
Input / Output |
Status |
0 1 2 3 4 |
OK (green) Compromised (orange) Fault (red) Unknown (red) Updating (blue) |
0 0.250 0.500 0.750 1.00 |
Output |