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User’s Manual
www.extron.com
Extron Electronics, USA
1230 South Lewis Street
Anaheim, CA 92805
800.633.9876 714.491.1500
FAX 714.491.1517
Extron Electronics, Europe
Beeldschermweg 6C
3821 AH Amersfoort, The Netherlands
+800.3987.6673 +31.33.453.4040
FAX +31.33.453.4050
Extron Electronics, Asia
135 Joo Seng Rd. #04-01
PM Industrial Bldg., Singapore 368363
+800.7339.8766 +65.6383.4400
FAX +65.6383.4664
Extron Electronics, Japan
Kyodo Building, 16 Ichibancho
Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 102-0082
Japan
+81.3.3511.7655 FAX +81.3.3511.7656
© 2008 Extron Electronics. All rights reserved.
AVT 100
Analog TV and Cable Demodulator
68-905-01 Rev G
01 08
Precautions
Safety Instructions • English
This symbol is intended to alert the user of important operating and maintenance (servicing) instructions in the literature provided with the equipment.
This symbol is intended to alert the user of the presence of uninsulated dangerous voltage within the product's enclosure that may present a risk of electric shock.
Caution
Read Instructions • Read and understand all safety and operating instructions before using the equipment.
Retain Instructions • The safety instructions should be kept for future reference.
Follow Warnings • Follow all warnings and instructions marked on the equipment or in the user information.
Avoid Attachments • Do not use tools or attachments that are not recommended by the equipment manufacturer because they may be hazardous.
Consignes de Sécurité • Français
Ce symbole sert à avertir l’utilisateur que la documentation fournie avec le matériel contient des instructions importantes concernant l’exploitation et la maintenance (réparation).
Ce symbole sert à avertir l’utilisateur de la présence dans le boîtier de l’appareil de tensions dangereuses non isolées posant des risques d’électrocution.
Attention
Lire les instructions• Prendre connaissance de toutes les consignes de sécurité et d’exploitation avant d’utiliser le matériel.
Conserver les instructions• Ranger les consignes de sécurité afin de pouvoir les consulter à l’avenir.
Respecter les avertissements • Observer tous les avertissements et consignes marqués sur le matériel ou présentés dans la documentation utilisateur.
Eviter les pièces de fixation • Ne pas utiliser de pièces de fixation ni d’outils non recommandés par le fabricant du matériel car cela risquerait de poser certains dangers.
Sicherheitsanleitungen • Deutsch
Dieses Symbol soll dem Benutzer in der im
Lieferumfang enthaltenen Dokumentation besonders wichtige Hinweise zur Bedienung und
Wartung (Instandhaltung) geben.
Dieses Symbol soll den Benutzer darauf aufmerksam machen, daß im Inneren des Gehäuses dieses
Produktes gefährliche Spannungen, die nicht isoliert sind und die einen elektrischen Schock verursachen können, herrschen.
Achtung
Lesen der Anleitungen • Bevor Sie das Gerät zum ersten Mal verwenden, sollten Sie alle Sicherheits-und Bedienungsanleitungen genau durchlesen und verstehen.
Aufbewahren der Anleitungen • Die Hinweise zur elektrischen Sicherheit des Produktes sollten Sie aufbewahren, damit Sie im Bedarfsfall darauf zurückgreifen können.
Befolgen der Warnhinweise • Befolgen Sie alle Warnhinweise und
Anleitungen auf dem Gerät oder in der Benutzerdokumentation.
Keine Zusatzgeräte • Verwenden Sie keine Werkzeuge oder Zusatzgeräte, die nicht ausdrücklich vom Hersteller empfohlen wurden, da diese eine
Gefahrenquelle darstellen können.
Instrucciones de seguridad • Español
Este símbolo se utiliza para advertir al usuario sobre instrucciones importantes de operación y mantenimiento (o cambio de partes) que se desean destacar en el contenido de la documentación suministrada con los equipos.
Este símbolo se utiliza para advertir al usuario sobre la presencia de elementos con voltaje peligroso sin protección aislante, que puedan encontrarse dentro de la caja o alojamiento del producto, y que puedan representar riesgo de electrocución.
Precaucion
Leer las instrucciones • Leer y analizar todas las instrucciones de operación y seguridad, antes de usar el equipo.
Conservar las instrucciones • Conservar las instrucciones de seguridad para futura consulta.
Obedecer las advertencias • Todas las advertencias e instrucciones marcadas en el equipo o en la documentación del usuario, deben ser obedecidas.
Evitar el uso de accesorios • No usar herramientas o accesorios que no sean especificamente recomendados por el fabricante, ya que podrian implicar riesgos.
Warning
Power sources • This equipment should be operated only from the power source indicated on the product. This equipment is intended to be used with a main power system with a grounded (neutral) conductor. The third (grounding) pin is a safety feature, do not attempt to bypass or disable it.
Power disconnection • To remove power from the equipment safely, remove all power cords from the rear of the equipment, or the desktop power module (if detachable), or from the power source receptacle (wall plug).
Power cord protection • Power cords should be routed so that they are not likely to be stepped on or pinched by items placed upon or against them.
Servicing • Refer all servicing to qualified service personnel. There are no userserviceable parts inside. To prevent the risk of shock, do not attempt to service this equipment yourself because opening or removing covers may expose you to dangerous voltage or other hazards.
Slots and openings • If the equipment has slots or holes in the enclosure, these are provided to prevent overheating of sensitive components inside. These openings must never be blocked by other objects.
Lithium battery • There is a danger of explosion if battery is incorrectly replaced.
Replace it only with the same or equivalent type recommended by the manufacturer. Dispose of used batteries according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Avertissement
Alimentations• Ne faire fonctionner ce matériel qu’avec la source d’alimentation indiquée sur l’appareil. Ce matériel doit être utilisé avec une alimentation principale comportant un fil de terre (neutre). Le troisième contact (de mise à la terre) constitue un dispositif de sécurité : n’essayez pas de la contourner ni de la désactiver.
Déconnexion de l’alimentation• Pour mettre le matériel hors tension sans danger, déconnectez tous les cordons d’alimentation de l’arrière de l’appareil ou du module d’alimentation de bureau (s’il est amovible) ou encore de la prise secteur.
Protection du cordon d’alimentation • Acheminer les cordons d’alimentation de manière à ce que personne ne risque de marcher dessus et à ce qu’ils ne soient pas écrasés ou pincés par des objets.
Réparation-maintenance • Faire exécuter toutes les interventions de réparationmaintenance par un technicien qualifié. Aucun des éléments internes ne peut être réparé par l’utilisateur. Afin d’éviter tout danger d’électrocution, l’utilisateur ne doit pas essayer de procéder lui-même à ces opérations car l’ouverture ou le retrait des couvercles risquent de l’exposer à de hautes tensions et autres dangers.
Fentes et orifices • Si le boîtier de l’appareil comporte des fentes ou des orifices, ceux-ci servent à empêcher les composants internes sensibles de surchauffer. Ces ouvertures ne doivent jamais être bloquées par des objets.
Lithium Batterie • Il a danger d'explosion s'll y a remplacment incorrect de la batterie. Remplacer uniquement avec une batterie du meme type ou d'un ype equivalent recommande par le constructeur. Mettre au reut les batteries usagees conformement aux instructions du fabricant.
Vorsicht
Stromquellen • Dieses Gerät sollte nur über die auf dem Produkt angegebene
Stromquelle betrieben werden. Dieses Gerät wurde für eine Verwendung mit einer Hauptstromleitung mit einem geerdeten (neutralen) Leiter konzipiert. Der dritte Kontakt ist für einen Erdanschluß, und stellt eine Sicherheitsfunktion dar.
Diese sollte nicht umgangen oder außer Betrieb gesetzt werden.
Stromunterbrechung • Um das Gerät auf sichere Weise vom Netz zu trennen, sollten Sie alle Netzkabel aus der Rückseite des Gerätes, aus der externen
Stomversorgung (falls dies möglich ist) oder aus der Wandsteckdose ziehen.
Schutz des Netzkabels • Netzkabel sollten stets so verlegt werden, daß sie nicht im Weg liegen und niemand darauf treten kann oder Objekte darauf- oder unmittelbar dagegengestellt werden können.
Wartung • Alle Wartungsmaßnahmen sollten nur von qualifiziertem
Servicepersonal durchgeführt werden. Die internen Komponenten des Gerätes sind wartungsfrei. Zur Vermeidung eines elektrischen Schocks versuchen Sie in keinem Fall, dieses Gerät selbst öffnen, da beim Entfernen der Abdeckungen die
Gefahr eines elektrischen Schlags und/oder andere Gefahren bestehen.
Schlitze und Öffnungen • Wenn das Gerät Schlitze oder Löcher im Gehäuse aufweist, dienen diese zur Vermeidung einer Überhitzung der empfindlichen
Teile im Inneren. Diese Öffnungen dürfen niemals von anderen Objekten blockiert werden.
Litium-Batterie • Explosionsgefahr, falls die Batterie nicht richtig ersetzt wird.
Ersetzen Sie verbrauchte Batterien nur durch den gleichen oder einen vergleichbaren Batterietyp, der auch vom Hersteller empfohlen wird. Entsorgen
Sie verbrauchte Batterien bitte gemäß den Herstelleranweisungen.
Advertencia
Alimentación eléctrica • Este equipo debe conectarse únicamente a la fuente/tipo de alimentación eléctrica indicada en el mismo. La alimentación eléctrica de este equipo debe provenir de un sistema de distribución general con conductor neutro a tierra. La tercera pata (puesta a tierra) es una medida de seguridad, no puentearia ni eliminaria.
Desconexión de alimentación eléctrica • Para desconectar con seguridad la acometida de alimentación eléctrica al equipo, desenchufar todos los cables de alimentación en el panel trasero del equipo, o desenchufar el módulo de alimentación (si fuera independiente), o desenchufar el cable del receptáculo de la pared.
Protección del cables de alimentación • Los cables de alimentación eléctrica se deben instalar en lugares donde no sean pisados ni apretados por objetos que se puedan apoyar sobre ellos.
Reparaciones/mantenimiento • Solicitar siempre los servicios técnicos de personal calificado. En el interior no hay partes a las que el usuario deba acceder. Para evitar riesgo de electrocución, no intentar personalmente la reparación/ mantenimiento de este equipo, ya que al abrir o extraer las tapas puede quedar expuesto a voltajes peligrosos u otros riesgos.
Ranuras y aberturas • Si el equipo posee ranuras o orificios en su caja/alojamiento, es para evitar el sobrecalientamiento de componentes internos sensibles. Estas aberturas nunca se deben obstruir con otros objetos.
Batería de litio • Existe riesgo de explosión si esta batería se coloca en la posición incorrecta. Cambiar esta batería únicamente con el mismo tipo (o su equivalente) recomendado por el fabricante. Desachar las baterías usadas siguiendo las instrucciones del fabricante.
Extron’s Warranty
Extron Electronics warrants this product against defects in materials and workmanship for a period of three years from the date of purchase. In the event of malfunction during the warranty period attributable directly to faulty workmanship and/or materials, Extron Electronics will, at its option, repair or replace said products or components, to whatever extent it shall deem necessary to restore said product to proper operating condition, provided that it is returned within the warranty period, with proof of purchase and description of malfunction to:
USA, Canada, South America, and Central America:
Europe, Africa, and the Middle East:
Extron Electronics
1001 East Ball Road
Anaheim, CA 92805, USA
Extron Electronics, Europe
Beeldschermweg 6C
3821 AH Amersfoort
The Netherlands
Asia:
Extron Electronics, Asia
135 Joo Seng Road, #04-01
PM Industrial Bldg.
Singapore 368363
Japan:
Extron Electronics, Japan
Kyodo Building
16 Ichibancho
Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 102-0082
Japan
This Limited Warranty does not apply if the fault has been caused by misuse, improper handling care, electrical or mechanical abuse, abnormal operating conditions or non-Extron authorized modification to the product.
If it has been determined that the product is defective, please call Extron and ask for an Applications Engineer at (714) 491-1500 (USA), 31.33.453.4040 (Europe),
65.6383.4400 (Asia), or 81.3.3511.7655 (Japan) to receive an RA# (Return Authorization number). This will begin the repair process as quickly as possible.
Units must be returned insured, with shipping charges prepaid. If not insured, you assume the risk of loss or damage during shipment. Returned units must include the serial number and a description of the problem, as well as the name of the person to contact in case there are any questions.
Extron Electronics makes no further warranties either expressed or implied with respect to the product and its quality, performance, merchantability, or fitness for any particular use. In no event will Extron Electronics be liable for direct, indirect, or consequential damages resulting from any defect in this product even if Extron
Electronics has been advised of such damage.
Please note that laws vary from state to state and country to country, and that some provisions of this warranty may not apply to you.
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DŽ
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ㅸ⬺₷ⶳㆱ愈⌗ⅈ⫟⌰垍䗅㋫㓾ɿ
FCC Class A Notice
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) this device may not cause harmful interference, and
(2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. The Class A limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is operated in a commercial environment. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. Operation of this equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful interference, in which case the user will be required to correct the interference at his own expense.
This unit was tested with shielded cables on the peripheral devices. Shielded cables must be used with the unit to ensure compliance with FCC emissions limits.
Precautions, cont’d
Table of Contents
Chapter 1 • Introduction
.......................................................... 1-1
About This Manual
................................................................ 1-2
About the AVT 100 Demodulator
.................................. 1-2
Models .................................................................................... 1-2
Features .................................................................................. 1-2
Application diagram .............................................................. 1-4
Chapter 2 • Installation and Connection
..................... 2-1
Mounting the AVT 100
........................................................ 2-2
Tabletop use ........................................................................... 2-2
Rack mounting ....................................................................... 2-2
UL requirements for rack mounting ............................... 2-2
Rack mounting procedure ............................................... 2-3
Rear Panel Features
.............................................................. 2-4
Wiring and Connecting the RS-232 Cable
................. 2-6
Connecting the AVT 100 to the IR Link
....................... 2-7
Connecting the AVT 100 to a MediaLink
™
Controller
................................................................................... 2-9
Chapter 3 • Operation
................................................................ 3-1
Front Panel Features
............................................................ 3-2
Using the Control Buttons
................................................ 3-2
Changing the channel ........................................................... 3-2
Initiating Auto-Scan .............................................................. 3-3
Adding and deleting channels .............................................. 3-3
Special Functions
................................................................... 3-3
Locking front panel controls (executive mode) ................... 3-3
Selecting tune or preset mode ............................................. 3-4
Presets .................................................................................... 3-4
Muting the audio and video outputs ................................... 3-5
Selecting the audio output mode ........................................ 3-5
Selecting the PAL broadcasting standard ............................ 3-6
Selecting the cable TV frequency (NTSC only) ..................... 3-6
Using the IR Remote for AVT 100
.................................. 3-6
Locking IR remote access ....................................................... 3-7
Installing batteries in the IR remote .................................... 3-7
Buttons on the AVT 100 IR Remote Control ........................ 3-8
Selecting a channel (tuning) using the IR remote ............... 3-9
Saving a preset using the IR remote .................................. 3-10
AVT 100 • Table of Contents i
Table of Contents, cont’d
Chapter 4 • Software Configuration and Control
4-1
Using Simple Instruction Set (SIS
™
) Commands
.... 4-2
Host-to-AVT communications ............................................... 4-2
AVT 100-initiated messages .................................................. 4-2
Error responses ...................................................................... 4-3
Using the command/response tables .................................... 4-3
Symbol definitions ................................................................. 4-4
Command/response table for SIS commands ....................... 4-5
Command/response table for special function SIS commands .............................................................................. 4-8
Advanced Instruction Set commands ................................ 4-13
Windows
®
-Based Control/Configuration
Software
................................................................................... 4-14
Compatibility ....................................................................... 4-14
Installing the software ........................................................ 4-14
Starting the software program ........................................... 4-16
Using the Windows-based control/configuration software Help ...................................................................... 4-17
Appendix A • Specifications, Parts, and
Accessories
.................................................................................. A-1
Specifications
......................................................................... A-2
Models
........................................................................................ A-5
Included Parts
......................................................................... A-5
Optional Accessories
........................................................... A-5
Appendix B • Channel Frequencies
.................................. B-1
PAL Format Channels
........................................................... B-2
PAL channels .......................................................................... B-3
NTSC Format Channels
.....................................................
B-9
NTSC TV channels ................................................................ B-10
NTSC cable channels — Standard frequency ..................... B-11
NTSC cable channels — IRC frequency ............................... B-12
NTSC cable channels — HRC frequency .............................. B-13
NTSC TV channels — Japan standard frequencies ............. B-14
NTSC cable channels — Japan standard frequencies ........ B-15 ii
All trademarks mentioned in this manual are the properties of their respective owners.
68-905-01 Rev. G
01 08
AVT 100 • Table of Contents
AVT 100
Introduction
About This Manual
About the AVT 100 Demodulator
Introduction
About This Manual
This manual provides information on the Extron AVT 100
Analog TV and Cable Demodulator, and discusses how to install and operate it.
About the AVT 100 Demodulator
The Extron AVT 100 is an audio/video demodulator that provides cable and television tuning for integration into professional A/V environments. The TV band provides reception of over-the-air TV (antenna) and CATV (cable) channels. Channels 2 through 125 are available in the United
States and other countries that use the NTSC standard.
Channels 48 through 855 are available in countries in which the
PAL standard is used.
N
In Japan, which uses the NTSC standard, channels 1 through 62 (antenna) and 1 through 63 (cable) are available, on different frequencies from the USA.
The AVT 100 may receive signals from a cable input or TV antenna. It is controllable from the front panel or through software via the RS-232 port.
The AVT 100 also provides wired IR for extended range infrared
(IR) operation. The optional AVT 100 IR Remote Control and the Extron IR Link Signal Repeater are available separately to be used in conjunction with this feature.
Models
Two models of the AVT 100 are available:
• AVT 100N (NTSC version) — Handles NTSC signals only. This version is used in the USA, Japan, and some other countries.
• AVT 100P (PAL version) — Handles PAL signals only.
This version is used in Great Britain and other nations that use the PAL standard.
These two models have different radio frequency (antenna) connectors, but in all other functionality, they are identical.
Features
Antenna (TV) and cable (CATV) channel reception — A full range of antenna and cable channels are available.
AVT 100N (NTSC):
Antenna 2-69
Cable 2-125
1-2 AVT 100 • Introduction
AVT 100N (NTSC) Japan frequencies:
Antenna 1-62
Cable 1-63
AVT 100P (PAL):
Antenna and cable 48-855
RS-232 interface — Enables you to enter Simple Instruction Set
(SIS ™ ) commands and interact with the Windows ® -based control software. The optional IR Link is also connected to this port.
IR Remote Control — Enables control of the AVT 100 via a hand-held remote control device that sends infrared signals to the AVT from a distance of up to 30 feet.
Communication is provided through an infrared receiver and hard wiring. The Extron IR Link is an option, available separately.
Balanced and unbalanced audio output — Enables you to use a wide variety of output devices without the need for conversion.
Savable configuration files — Lets you save the system configuration as a file. The saved configuration can subsequently be reloaded to the AVT 100 to restore all settings at once.
Power supply — An external desktop 12 VDC power supply connects to the back panel of the unit via a two-pin captive screw connector and accepts 100 to 240 VAC.
Enclosure — Compact, 1U, quarter-rack enclosure, 6.7 inches in depth.
Cable/antenna (TV) DIP switch — Enables switching between cable and antenna modes.
99 presets — Presets can be associated with channels using SIS programming, the IR remote control, or the AVT
Windows-based control software. The AVT provides 99 programmable channel presets for TV and 99 for cable.
Stored presets can be used to recall the corresponding cable or antenna channel in preset mode. With SIS commands, presets can be recalled in tune mode as well as preset mode.
Audio and video muting — Enables the audio and video outputs to be individually muted through the appropriate
SIS command, the IR remote, or the Windows-based control software.
AVT 100 • Introduction 1-3
Introduction, cont’d
Mono audio — Can be selected by SIS commands or the
Windows-based control software. When Mono is disabled
(the factory default), stereo reception is enabled.
Front panel security lockout (executive mode) — Locks out users from all front panel functions. Executive mode can be enabled via SIS commands or the Windows-based control software.
IR remote access On/Off — Locks out users from controlling the AVT 100 through the IR remote control. This access can be turned on and off via SIS commands or the
Windows-based control software.
Rack mountability — The AVT 100 can be mounted on a rack shelf, using the optional mounting accessories. It can also be placed on a tabletop, for which four self-adhesive feet are provided.
PAL standard selection — Lets you select the appropriate PAL broadcasting standard for your area.
CATV frequency selection (NTSC only) — Lets you select the
NTSC cable frequency used by your cable provider.
Application diagram
The following application diagram gives an example of how the various supported devices can be connected to the AVT 100.
Use it as a guide for all AVT 100 connections.
Optional
IR Remote
Extron
AVT 100
Analog TV/Cable
Demodulator
C
PO
W
0.5
A
ER
MA
X
LIS
D
1T2
I.T.E
3
AN
T IN
RF
OU
TP
UT
VID
RS
-23
2 / IR
IR
+1
2
Tx
Rx
R
L
RF
Audio
Control System
1-4
Cable
Feed or
Antenna
AVT 100 application example
AVT 100 • Introduction
Plasma/LCD Display
AVT 100
Installation and Connection
Mounting the AVT 100
Rear Panel Features
Wiring and Connecting the RS-232 Cable
Connecting the AVT 100 to the IR Link
Connecting the AVT 100 to a MediaLink
™
Control Module
Installation and Connection
Mounting the AVT 100
The AVT 100 demodulator can be set on a table or mounted on a rack shelf.
Tabletop use
Four self-adhesive rubber feet are included with the AVT 100.
For tabletop use, attach one foot at each corner on the bottom surface of the unit, and place the unit in the desired location.
Rack mounting
For optional rack mounting, do not install the rubber feet.
Mount the AVT 100 on an RSU 129 Universal Rack Shelf Kit
(part # 60-190-01 ) or an RSB 129 Basic Rack Shelf (part
# 60-604-01 ).
UL requirements for rack mounting
The following Underwriters Laboratories (UL) requirements pertain to the safe installation of the equipment in a rack.
1 .
Elevated operating ambient temperature — If the equipment is installed in a closed or multi-unit rack assembly, the operating ambient temperature of the rack environment may be greater than room ambient temperature. Therefore, install the equipment in an environment compatible with the maximum ambient temperature (Tma = +113 °F, +45 °C) specified by Extron.
2 .
Reduced air flow — Install the equipment in a rack so that the amount of air flow required for safe operation of the equipment is not compromised.
3 .
Mechanical loading — Mount the equipment in the rack so that a hazardous condition is not achieved due to uneven mechanical loading.
4 .
Circuit overloading — Connect the equipment to the supply circuit and consider the effect that circuit overloading might have on overcurrent protection and supply wiring. Appropriate consideration of equipment nameplate ratings should be used when addressing this concern.
5 .
Reliable earthing (grounding) — Maintain reliable grounding of rack-mounted equipment. Pay particular attention to supply connections other than direct connections to the branch circuit (e.g., use of power strips).
2-2 AVT 100 • Installation and Connection
Rack mounting procedure
To rack mount the AVT,
1 .
If feet were previously installed on the bottom of the
AVT 100, remove them.
1U Universal Rack Shelf
1/2 Rack Width Front False
Faceplate
1/4 Rack Width Front False
Faceplate
Both front false faceplates use 2 screws.
(2) 4-40 x 3/16"
Screws
Use 2 mounting holes on opposite corners.
Mounting the AVT 100 on a rack shelf
2 .
Mount the AVT 100 on the rack shelf, using two 4-40 by
3/16" screws in opposite (diagonal) corners to secure the unit to the shelf.
3 .
Install blank panels or other units in the remaining space on the rack shelf.
AVT 100 • Installation and Connection 2-3
Installation and Connection, cont’d
Rear Panel Features
The following figure shows the switches and connectors on the rear panel of the AVT 100.
8 7 6
POWER
12V
0.5A MAX
NTSC
ANT IN
RF
OUTPUT
R S -232 / IR
VID Tx Rx IR +12
AUDIO
L R
1 2 3 4 5
AVT 100 rear panel
1 Power connector — Plug the external 12 VDC power supply into this 2-pin, 3.5 mm captive screw connector. The power supply is included with the unit. The figure on the next page shows how to wire the connector.
C The length of the exposed (stripped) copper wires is important. The ideal length is 3/16 " (5 mm) .
Longer bare wires can short together. Shorter wires are not as secure in the captive screw connectors and could be pulled out.
C
Do not tin the stripped power supply leads before
U
S installing the captive screw connector. Tinned wires are not as secure in the captive screw connectors and could be pulled out.
W Keep the two power cord wires separate while plugging in the power supply. Remove power before wiring.
To verify the polarity before connection, plug in the power supply with no load and check the output with a voltmeter.
2-4 AVT 100 • Installation and Connection
A
Smooth Ridges
A
Tie Wrap
3/16”
(5 mm) Max.
Power Supply
Output Cord
Smooth
Ridges
SECTION A–A
2-Pole Orange
Captive Screw Connector (12V)
Power connector wiring
2
3
4
5
Radio frequency (RF) connector — Plug an antenna or CATV cable into the 75 ohm F type female coaxial connector (for
NTSC), or into the 75 ohm female IEC 169-2 connector (for PAL).
Cable/antenna switch — Use this DIP switch to select between cable (CATV) and antenna (TV) modes. Presets and NTSC
Auto-Scan channels are saved separately for antenna and CATV.
Composite video output connector — Plug a television or other
A/V output device into this female BNC connector.
Audio connector — Plug an audio output device into this 5-pole captive screw connector. Balanced or unbalanced audio is output on this connector.
3/16” (5 mm) max.
Do not tin the wires!
Tip
NO GROUND HERE.
Sleeve(s)
Tip
NO GROUND HERE.
Unbalanced
Stereo Output
Wiring the audio output connector
Tip
Ring
Tip
Ring
Balanced
Stereo Output
AVT 100 • Installation and Connection 2-5
Installation and Connection, cont’d
6
7
8
C Connect the sleeve to ground ( ). Connecting the sleeve to a negative (–) terminal will damage the audio output circuits.
RS-232/IR connector — Use this five-pole connector for an
RS-232 connection to a PC for entering SIS commands and using the Windows-based control software, and/or for connecting the wired IR Link. See “Wiring and Connecting the RS-232 Cable,” on the next page, for information on connecting to this port.
Reserved switch — This is an extra DIP switch that is not used.
Version label — Indicates the version, PAL or NTSC, of the
AVT 100.
Wiring and Connecting the RS-232 Cable
To connect your computer or control system to the RS-232 connector, use a male 9-pin, D-to-bare-wire RS-232 cable or a universal control cable (UC 50', UC 100', or UC 200'). One end of the UC cable is terminated with a female 9-pin, D connector, and the other end is unterminated. Wire the unterminated end to the provided five-pin captive screw plug.
The following diagram shows the UC cable’s pin assignments.
Color
Black
Gray
Purple
Blue
Green ( )
Yellow
Orange (Rx)
Red (Tx)
Brown
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
Pin #
AVT 100
Tuner
UC Cable
Shield Connector Shell
1
5
Computer or Control
System
6
9
UC cable pin assignment color codes
1 .
Wire the RS-232 cable to the five-pole captive screw connector, provided with the AVT 100, as described below
(see the illustration on page 2-7). Connect only the red, orange, and green wires in the cable; and use only the first three pins on the connector, starting at the left.
a .
Connect the red wire to the first pin on the left, which plugs into the Tx (Transmit) port.
b .
Connect the orange wire to the second pin, which plugs into the Rx (Receive) port.
c .
Connect the green wire to the third pin, which plugs into the ground port, marked with this symbol:
2-6 AVT 100 • Installation and Connection
2 .
Plug the five-pole connector into the RS-232/IR receptacle on the AVT 100 rear panel.
The following diagram shows how to connect your PC or control system to the RS-232/IR port.
RS-232/IR
Tx Rx IR + 12V
AVT 100 Tuner
Rear Panel
RS-232/IR Port
Connect a ground wire between the AVT 100 and the computer or control system.
Ground ( ) Green
Receive (Rx) Orange
Transmit (Tx) Red
Transmit (Tx)
Receive (Rx)
If you use cable that has a drain wire, tie the drain wire to ground at both ends.
Computer or
Control System
RS-232 Port
Wiring the AVT 100 to a PC or control station through the RS-232/IR port
Connecting the AVT 100 to the IR Link
The optional IR Link Infrared Signal Repeater can be connected directly to an AVT 100. To wire the IR Link for use with your
AVT 100,
1 .
Prepare the site and install a wall box, following the directions in the IR Link User’s Manual , provided with your
IR Link equipment.
2 .
Cut a length of 150' (45 m) or less of Extron Comm-Link
(CTL or CTLP) cable to go between the AVT 100 and the IR
Link.
3 .
Attach a 3.5 mm, 5-pole captive screw connector to each end of the cable. Only three wires (between pins A, B, and
D on the IR Link end, and pins Ground, IR, and +12 V on the AVT 100 end) are required. Wire the cable as shown in the illustration on the next page. Connectors are included with the IR Link, but the cable must be purchased separately.
4 .
Plug the 5-pole connector into one of the IR Link’s communications connectors.
AVT 100 • Installation and Connection 2-7
Installation and Connection, cont’d
5 .
Plug the other end of the cable into the RS-232/IR port on the rear panel of the AVT 100.
C Do not connect more than one IR Link (either in parallel or in series) to a demodulator.
POWER
12V
0.5A MAX
ANT IN
RF
OUTPUT
R S -2 3 2 / IR
VID Tx Rx IR +12
AUDIO
L R
150' (45 m) m a xim u m
AVT 100 Re a r P a nel
AVT 100 Remote
IR LINK
IR Link
Using the AVT 100 IR Remote with the IR Link
The following diagram shows how to wire the AVT 100 to use the infrared remote control with the optional IR Link.
AVT 100 Remote
ANT IN
RF
OUTPUT
R S -2 3 2 / IR
VID Tx Rx IR +12
L R
POWER
12V
0.5A MAX
AVT 100 Re a r P a nel
12
IR
+12 VDC
Mod u l a ted IR
Gro u nd ( )
A
D
B
IR Link Re a r P a nel
Wiring the IR Link to the AVT 100
N The ground pin is shared between RS-232 control and the IR Link connection.
2-8 AVT 100 • Installation and Connection
Connecting the AVT 100 to a MediaLink
™
Controller
You can hard wire an MLC MediaLink ™ Controller’s modulated
IR output connector directly to the AVT 100 to provide remote control of the AVT.
Follow these steps to connect the AVT 100 to an MLC. See the diagrams on the next page for examples.
1 .
Cut a length of 150' (45 m) or less of Extron Comm-Link
(CTL or CTLP) cable, which will go between the AVT 100 and the MediaLink controller.
2 .
Attach the provided 3.5 mm, 5-pole connector to the end of the cable that will attach to the AVT 100, connecting one wire to the center pin (which will plug into the AVT’s ground connector pin, marked with ), and another wire to the pin to the right of the center ground pin. (This pin will plug into the AVT’s IR connector.) Plug this end of the cable into the RS-232/IR connector on the AVT’s rear panel.
3 .
On the other (MediaLink controller) end of the cable, do either of the following:
• Attach the cable’s corresponding wires to the ground and IR output pins of the captive screw connector that will plug into the MLC. Plug this end of the cable into the IR connector on the MLC’s rear panel.
• Attach the cable’s wires directly to the ground and IR output pins on the MLC’s rear panel.
4 .
Using Global Configurator software, program the MLC with the proper IR drivers for the AVT 100. Refer to your
MediaLink controller user’s manual for more information.
N If the AVT 100 does not respond to commands from the
MediaLink controller, a 1k ohm resistor may be required between the ground and IR pins on the AVT 100.
This resistor is required when you are using an MLC 52 to control the AVT.
AVT 100 • Installation and Connection 2-9
Installation and Connection, cont’d
ANT IN
RF
POWER
12V
0.5A MAX
AVT 100 Re a r P a nel
OUTPUT
R S -2 3 2 / IR
VID
Tx Rx IR +12
L R
1K Re s i s tor
IR Mod u l a ted IR
Gro u nd ( )
D
B
Wiring the AVT 100 to an MLC 52
ANT IN
RF
OUTPUT
R S -2 3 2 / IR
VID Tx Rx IR +12
L R
POWER
12V
0.5A MAX
AVT 100 Re a r P a nel or here
IR Mod u l a ted IR
Gro u nd ( )
D
B
Here
MLC 52
Re a r P a nel
DI S PLAY
R S -2 3 2/IR
A B C D E
A B C D E
CM/IR/ S CP
1 2 3 4
A B
RELAY S
NORMALLY OPEN
C
5 6
A B
A B
IR/ S ERIAL OUT
C
ML S PWR
R S -2 3 2 12V
MLC 226 IP Bottom Panel
Wiring the AVT 100 to an MLC 226 IP
N
The MLC can also control the AVT 100 via an optional
IR Emitter. Refer to your MLC user’s manual for information on connecting the emitter.
2-10 AVT 100 • Installation and Connection
AVT 100
Operation
Front Panel Features
Using the Control Buttons
Special Functions
Using the IR Remote Control for AVT 100
Operation
Front Panel Features
The NTSC and the PAL versions of the AVT 100 have the same front panel with identical components and appearance. The following features and functions are available on the AVT 100 front panel.
AVT 100
TV/CABLE TUNER
CHANNEL
1
AVT 100 front panel
2 3
1
2
3
Digital display — This 3-digit, alphanumeric LED display indicates the antenna TV or CATV channel being received (in
Tune mode) or the selected channel preset (in Preset mode).
IR receiver (not visible from the exterior of the unit) — This sensor receives commands via infrared signals from the optional
AVT 100 IR Remote Control.
Channel up and down buttons — These push-buttons are used to increment or decrement the channel or preset number. You can also activate Auto-Scan by pressing and holding both of these buttons simultaneously for 2 seconds (see “Initiating
Auto-Scan” on the next page).
Using the Control Buttons
Changing the channel
•
•
If the AVT 100 is in Tune mode (factory default):
Press the up or down Channel button to tune to the desired channel. The current channel number is displayed in the
3-digit LED display.
Press and hold down one of the Channel buttons to change the channels rapidly until the button is released. When the highest channel number available is reached, the display restarts numbering at the lowest channel number.
3-2
AVT 100 • Operation
C
US
If the AVT 100 is in Preset mode (available only by SIS command, the Windows-based control software, or the
IR remote control), you can change only to a preset channel. To change the preset, press the Channel buttons to display the numbers of the programmed presets in incremental or decremental order.
Initiating Auto-Scan
When Auto-Scan is enabled, the AVT 100 scans all channels and saves to memory those with an active signal.
To initiate automatic scanning, press and hold both Channel buttons. After about 2 seconds, the AVT 100 scans through the channels and saves them to memory.
Adding and deleting channels
Auto-Scanned channels can be added to or removed from memory individually by using SIS commands or the Windowsbased control software. (See chapter 4, “Software Configuration and Control,” for further information.)
Special Functions
The AVT 100 offers some special functions that are accessible only by using SIS commands, the AVT 100 Remote, and the
Windows-based control software. Refer to chapter 4, “Software
Configuration and Control,” or the AVT 100 help file for the commands to enable these functions.
Locking front panel controls (executive mode)
Executive mode disables all front panel controls, locking out the user from those functions. Putting the AVT 100 in this mode enhances security by protecting against inappropriate or accidental changes to settings.
When the AVT 100 is in executive mode, all serial port commands remain enabled.
When executive mode is enabled, the AVT 100 displays the following message on the digital display for 2 seconds:
Any attempt to use the front panel buttons while the AVT 100 is in executive mode causes the LOC (Locked) message to flash.
AVT 100 • Operation 3-3
Operation, cont’d
When executive mode is disabled, the AVT 100 displays the
UNL (Unlocked) message:
3-4
Selecting tune or preset mode
Two channel selection modes are available: Tune and Preset .
You can use the Windows-based control software, SIS commands, or the AVT 100 Remote to switch between modes.
• In Tune mode , the Channel up and down buttons increment and decrement by one channel with each press of the button. If a button is held down for 2 seconds, the channels tune rapidly up or down until the button is released. Tune mode is the factory default.
• In Preset mode , the Channel buttons step up or down through presets that have been associated with channels via SIS commands, the AVT 100 Remote, or the Windowsbased control software.
N Presets can be recalled via SIS commands, the Windowsbased control software, or the AVT 100 Remote in both tune mode and preset mode.
Presets
The AVT 100 provides 198 programmable presets—99 for antenna and 99 for cable. Presets are associated with channels by SIS commands (see chapter 4, “Software Configuration and
Control” ) , the AVT 100 Remote (see “Using the IR Remote
Control for AVT 100,” later in this chapter), or via the Windowsbased control software (see the software’s help file).
Channel presets that are programmed while the AVT is in either antenna or CATV mode remain exclusive to the mode in which they were saved.
The following table shows the ranges of channel numbers that may be preset.
Channel #
NTSC
DIP Swit c h Antenna Cable
NTSC Japan PAL
Antenna Cable
Antenna and Cable
2 t o 6 9 2 t o 125 1 t o 62 1 t o 63 48 t o 885
Channels available for presetting
AVT 100 • Operation
When the AVT 100 is in tune mode and a preset is recalled via the appropriate SIS command, the AVT 100 Remote, or the
Windows-based control software, a stored preset recalls the cable or antenna TV channel that was programmed for it. When you select a preset in either tune or preset mode, its preset number is displayed for 2 seconds. Then the display changes to the channel number associated with the selected preset.
Example: If preset 30 is selected via the Channel buttons in
Preset mode, the digital display shows the following:
After 2 seconds, the digital display shows the channel number
(28 in this example) associated with preset number 30.
To overwrite a preset and change its channel, enter the SIS command or the Windows-based control software selection, or press the appropriate buttons on the IR remote control to save a different channel to that preset number. See chapter 4,
“Software Configuration and Control, for information on programming the presets using SIS commands.
Muting the audio and video outputs
Audio and video outputs can be individually muted through the appropriate SIS command, the IR remote control, or the
Windows-based control software. (See chapter 4, “Software
Configuration and Control” or the AVT 100 help file for further information.)
Selecting the audio output mode
You can select the audio output mode (mono or stereo) using SIS commands or the Windows-based control software. (Mono is the factory default.)
On PAL models, the following four audio selections are available if a dual channel is detected:
• L-L — Select the left audio channel for dual mono output.
• R-R — Select the right audio channel for dual mono output.
AVT 100 • Operation 3-5
Operation, cont’d
• L-R — Select the left input channel for left output and the right input channel for right output.
• R-L — Select the right input channel for left output and the left input channel for right output.
(See chapter 4, “Software Configuration and Control,” for information on the SIS commands for audio mode selection. To switch audio output modes using the Windows-based control software, refer to the help file.)
Selecting the PAL broadcasting standard
There are several different PAL broadcasting standards. You can select the appropriate standard using SIS commands (see chapter 4, “Software Configuration and Control) or the
Windows-based control software (see the software program’s help file).
Selecting the cable TV frequency (NTSC only)
You can select the CATV frequency (Standard, IRC, HRC, or
Japan standard) so that your AVT 100 is compatible with the frequency used by your cable provider. You can select the frequency using SIS commands (see chapter 4, “Software
Configuration and Control”) or the Windows-based control software (see the software program’s help file).
Using the IR Remote Control for AVT 100
The optional hand-held AVT 100 IR Remote Control lets you remotely perform many of the functions that are also available through the front panel buttons, SIS commands, and/or the
Windows-based control software. The AVT responds to commands from the AVT 100 Remote as if the corresponding button were pressed on the front panel, or the corresponding
SIS command or Windows-based control software selection were entered.
From a distance of no more than 30 feet, the remote control sends infrared (IR) signals to the AVT 100 through the tuner’s front panel. The IR receiver is located to the right of the channel display, but is not visible from in front of the AVT 100.
The infrared remote receiver can receive the signal if it is sent from within a 40 degree arc to the right or left of direct line of sight between the remote and the AVT 100 receiver. See the diagram below.
3-6 AVT 100 • Operation
AVT 100
TV/CABLE TUNER
CHANNEL
AVT 100
40 40
30 feet maximum
0
4
Video
TV
MUTE
TUNE
Audio
PRESET
1
Channel
2
5 6
3
7
8 9 ENTER SAVE
AVT 100 REMOTE
AVT Remote
Area for remote signal reception
N The AVT 100 must be plugged in before you operate the remote control. Setup operations cannot be performed from the remote.
Locking IR remote access
The AVT 100 Remote Control can be set to lock out users from using it to control the AVT 100. This remote access can be turned on and off via SIS commands or the Windows-based control software. When remote access is set to Off, all AVT 100 controls remain available through other means (SIS commands,
Windows-based control software, and the front panel).
Installing batteries in the AVT 100 Remote
Install two AAA batteries in the AVT 100 Remote Control as shown below.
Installing batteries in the AVT 100 Remote
AVT 100 • Operation 3-7
Operation, cont’d
Buttons on the AVT 100 IR Remote Control
The following functions are available through the buttons on the AVT 100 Remote Control.
3
2
1
MUTE
VIDEO
CHANNEL TUNE
AUDIO
PRESET
0
CHANNEL
1 2 3
4 5 6 7
8 9 ENTER SAVE
4
5
6
7
8
AVT 100 REMOTE
Buttons on the AVT 100 Remote Control
1
2
Channel selection (0 through 9) — In tune mode, press these number buttons to specify a channel number, then press Enter to select it.
In preset mode, pressing these buttons also selects the channel whose number(s) you pressed. The buttons do not select preset numbers.
Channel up/down — Press the up and down arrows on this rocker button to increment and decrement the channel or preset number.
In tune mode, pressing either part of this button displays the adjacent channel number. If an Auto-Scan has been performed, pressing the Channel button causes the display to cycle between the channels that were set by the scan for the mode (TV or cable) in which the scan was done. (In this case, the adjacent channel may not be available for display.)
3-8 AVT 100 • Operation
3
4
5
6
7
8
In Preset mode, the next or previous preset channel is displayed, depending on which part of the button you pressed. The
AVT 100 briefly displays the preset number preceded by a “P,” then it displays the channel number associated with that preset.
If no presets have been defined when the Channel button is pressed, the display shows “P00,” then the channel number to which the AVT 100 was set before entering preset mode.
N The Channel up/down button applies to antenna (TV) and cable modes. Use the DIP switch on the rear panel to switch between these modes.
Video Mute — Press this button to toggle video muting on and off. When muting is on, video output is mute.
Audio Mute — Press this button to toggle audio muting on and off. When muting is on, audio output is mute.
Tune — Press this button to switch to tune mode. In tune mode, the Channel buttons switch between channel numbers.
Preset — Press this button to switch to preset mode. In preset mode, the Channel buttons switch between preset channels.
Save — After keying in a preset number, press this button to save the currently selected channel as a preset.
Enter — After keying in a channel number, press this button to switch to that channel.
Selecting a channel (tuning) using the IR remote
To select or change a channel using the AVT 100 IR Remote
Control,
1 .
Using the IR remote channel selection number buttons in the same way you would use the number keys on a calculator, enter the number of the desired channel.
Example: To change to channel 105, press the buttons numbered 1, then 0, then 5.
2 .
Press the Enter button to activate the channel change. If the number you entered is a valid channel, the AVT 100 switches to it, and the number remains displayed on the
AVT 100 front panel.
If you enter an invalid (out of range) channel number, after
3 seconds the front panel display returns to the channel number that was displayed previously and does not change the channel.
AVT 100 • Operation 3-9
Operation, cont’d
Saving a preset using the IR remote
To assign a channel number to one of the 198 available presets,
1 .
Switch to the channel that you want to assign. (See
“Selecting a channel (tuning) using the IR remote,” on the previous page.)
2 .
Enter the preset number to which you want to assign the current channel.
3 .
Press Save. The AVT 100 saves the preset, and displays
“P” and the preset number as confirmation. After
3 seconds, the display returns to the channel number that you just saved.
N
If an invalid preset number is entered, no preset is saved.
AVT 100
4
Software Configuration and
Control
Using Simple Instruction Set (SIS
™
) Commands
Windows
®
-Based Control Software
3-10 AVT 100 • Operation
Software Configuration and Control
The AVT 100 demodulator can be remotely set up and controlled via a host computer or other device (such as a control system), attached to the rear panel RS-232 port. See chapter 2,
“Installation and Connection,” for information on connections.
The control device (host) can use the Extron Simple Instruction
Set (SIS ™ ) commands or the Windows
-based control software.
Using Simple Instruction Set (SIS
™
) Commands
Host-to-AVT communications
SIS commands consist of one or more characters per field. No special characters are required to begin or end a command sequence. You can enter these commands from your PC using a communication software program such as HyperTerminal.
When the AVT 100 determines that a command is valid, it executes the command and sends a response to the host device.
Most responses from the AVT 100 to the host (PC) end with a carriage return and a line feed (CR/LF = ), which signals the end of the response character string. A string is one or more characters.
AVT 100-initiated messages
When a local event such as a front panel selection takes place, the AVT 100 responds by sending a message to the host, indicating what selection was entered. No response is required from the host. One of the following AVT 100-initiated messages is displayed, depending on your version.
These messages are displayed only at power-up.
For the
X4
and
X1
values shown below, see “Symbol definitions” on page 4-4.
NTSC version:
(C) Copyright 2006, Extron Electronics, AVT 100 – NTSC
Version, Vx.xx
Dip X4
TVC X1
PAL version:
(C) Copyright 2005, Extron Electronics, AVT 100 – PAL Version,
Vx.xx
Dip X4
TVC X1
4-2 AVT 100 • S oftware Configuration and Control
The AVT 100 sends the copyright message when it first powers on. Vx.xx is the firmware version number.
Error responses
If the AVT 100 is unable to execute a command it receives because the command is invalid or contains invalid parameters, the AVT returns an error response to the host. Error response codes and their descriptions are as follows:
E01 – Invalid input channel number (out of range)
E10 – Invalid command
E11 – Invalid preset
E13 – Invalid value (out of range)
Using the command/response tables
The command/response tables on the following pages list valid command ASCII and hexadecimal codes, the AVT 100’s responses to the host, and a description of the command’s function or the results of executing the command.
The ASCII to HEX conversion table below is for use with the command/response tables.
A S CII to HEX Conversion Table
•
AVT 100 • S oftware Configuration and Control 4-3
Software Configuration and Control, cont’d
Symbol definitions
= CR/LF (carriage return/line feed) (hex 0D 0A)
= Soft carriage return (no line feed)
•
= Space
Esc = Escape key
X1
X2
= Channel number
NTSC antenna: 002 – 069
NTSC cable: 002 – 125
NTSC Japan antenna: 001-062
NTSC Japan cable: 001-063
PAL antenna and cable: 48 – 855
= Muting/Executive mode
0 = Off
1 = On
X3
X4
X5
X6
X7
X8
X9
= Presets 1 – 99 (The preset number cannot be more than two digits.)
= Antenna or cable DIP switch setting
0 = Antenna (TV)
1 = CATV (cable)
= PAL standard selection
0 = B/G (default)
1 = D/K
2 = I
= Part number
= Audio adjustment level: -63 through +12
= Gain level: 0 – 12
= Attenuation level: 0 – 63
If a command is not case-sensitive, this is indicated by showing the command letter in uppercase, followed by a slash (/), then the same letter in lowercase.
Examples: B/b, Z/z
4-4 AVT 100 • S oftware Configuration and Control AVT 100 • S oftware Configuration and Control 4-5
Software Configuration and Control, cont’d
4-6
AVT 100 • S oftware Configuration and Control AVT 100 • S oftware Configuration and Control 4-7
Software Configuration and Control, cont’d
Command/response table for special function SIS commands
The syntax for initiating a special function is:
X!
* __ # where __ is the function number and X!
is the value.
To view a function’s setting, use:
__# where __ is the function number.
In the following special functions command table, the values of the X!
variable are different for each command/function. These values are given in the far right column.
4-8 AVT 100 • S oftware Configuration and Control AVT 100 • S oftware Configuration and Control 4-9
Software Configuration and Control, cont’d
4-10 AVT 100 • S oftware Configuration and Control AVT 100 • S oftware Configuration and Control 4-11
Software Configuration and Control, cont’d
4-12 AVT 100 • S oftware Configuration and Control AVT 100 • S oftware Configuration and Control 4-13
Software Configuration and Control, cont’d
Windows
®
-Based Control/Configuration
Software
In addition to the SIS commands, the AVT 100 Windows-based control/configuration software provides you with another means of configuring and controlling the AVT 100 via RS-232.
This program includes the functions found on the AVT’s front panel and the IR remote control, and some additional features that are available only through the Windows-based software or the SIS commands.
Compatibility
The software is compatible with Microsoft ® Windows 98,
Windows NT, Windows 2000, and Windows XP.
Installing the software
Extron’s AVT 100 Windows-based software program is provided on a CD with the AVT. You can obtain additional copies of the software at no extra charge and download updates from the
Extron Web site at http://www.extron.com.
The Windows-based control software program requires a minimum of 2.5 MB (megabytes) of hard disk space.
To use the software that is on the CD, you must install the program on your computer. Follow these steps:
1 .
Insert CD ROM Disk B into your CD drive. The disk should open automatically. If it does not, double-click
LAUNCH.EXE on the CD to start it.
2 .
On the “Extron Software Products Disc B:
Issue 2007.x” screen, click the Software button, shown at right.
3 .
On the Control Software screen, click the AVT 100’s Install link (outlined in the illustration on the next page).
4-14 AVT 100 • Software Configuration and Control
Software Installation screen on CD
3 .
On the File Download window that appears, click Run to begin installing the program.
If you want to save the installation file
(AVT100Setupv3_ n .exe) to your desktop, click Save.
On the Save As window, save the setup file to the desired location on your computer. When you are ready to install the software, double-click on the
AVT100Setupv3_n.exe icon and follow the directions on the screens.
4 .
A Security prompt appears. Click Run on this window to continue with the installation.
5 .
Follow the instructions on the InstallShield Wizard screens to complete the program installation.
By default the installation creates a folder called
“AVT 100” in the following location on the computer: c: \Program Files\Extron\AVT 100
If there is no Extron folder in your Program Files folder, the installation program creates it as well.
AVT 100 • Software Configuration and Control 4-15
Software Configuration and Control, cont’d
Starting the software program
Some items found in the software program correspond directly to the front panel or remote controls. (See chapter 3,
“Operation,” for front panel and IR remote control features and settings.) Other features are accessible only through the software or SIS commands (discussed earlier in this chapter).
The AVT 100 Help program provides complete information on settings and on how to use the software.
1 .
To run the program, double-click on the
AVT 100.exe file icon, shown at right.
The Extron AVT 100 window appears, with all objects grayed out. The Communication Setup window is displayed in front of it.
AVT 100 window with Communication Setup dialog box
2 .
From the Port drop-down menu, select the communications port that is connected to your tuner’s
Config/RS-232 port.
3 .
Click Connect . The currently selected channel number appears in the Channel box, and all menu options (except
Connect) become available. The AVT 100 window’s status bar at the bottom of the screen indicates your AVT’s configuration — NTSC or PAL.
4-16 AVT 100 • S oftware Configuration and Control
AVT 100 window, connected (PAL and NTSC versions)
You are now ready to configure presets, select channels, and perform the other tasks available from the pull-down menus, check boxes, and the TV/Cable Channel field on the AVT 100 window.
The TV/Cable Channel field is titled “TV Channel” or
“Cable Channel,” depending on the position of the
Antenna/Cable DIP switch on the rear panel.
Using the Windows-based control software help file
The AVT 100 Windows-based control software contains a help program, which explains all menu options, buttons, and functions that are accessible from the AVT 100 window.
To open the help file, select Contents...
from the Help pull-down menu on the AVT 100 window, or press the F1 key on your computer keyboard.
AVT 100 • S oftware Configuration and Control 4-17
Software Configuration and Control, cont’d
AVT 100
A
Specifications, Parts, and
Accessories
Specifications
Models
Included Parts
Optional Accessories
4-18 AVT 100 • S oftware Configuration and Control
Specifications, Parts, and Accessories
Specifications
RF video input
Number/signal type ................... 1 radio frequency (RF)
Connectors
NTSC model ..................... 1 female F connector
PAL model ........................ 1 female IEC 169-2, 75 ohm connector
Sensitivity ..................................... -20 to +20 dBmV
Frequency range .......................... 55 MHz to 855 MHz
NTSC over the air TV channels . 2-69
Japan .................................. 1-62
NTSC CATV cable channels ...... 2-125
Japan .................................. 1-63
PAL over the air TV and cable channels
48 MHz to 855 MHz
Impedance .................................... 75 ohms
Vertical frequency
NTSC model ..................... 60 Hz
PAL model ........................ 50 Hz
Video output
Number/signal type ................... 1 composite video
Connectors .................................... 1 BNC female
Nominal level ............................... 1 Vp-p for composite video
Minimum/maximum levels ...... 0.4 V to 1.0 Vp-p (follows input)
Impedance .................................... 75 ohms
DC offset ....................................... ±10 mV with input at 0 offset
Sync
Standards
NTSC model ..................... NTSC 3.58
International model ......... PAL
Audio
THD + Noise ................................ NTSC: 0.4% @ 1 kHz
PAL: 0.6% @ 1 kHz
S/N ................................................ NTSC: -55 dB @ 1 kHz
PAL: -58 dB @ 1 kHz
Stereo channel separation .......... >35 dB @ 1 kHz
A-2 AVT 100 • S pecifications, Parts, and Accessories
RF audio input
Number/signal type ................... 1 (as part of the RF signal)
0 dBu = 0.775 Vrms, 0 dBV = 1 Vrms, 0 dBV 2 dBu
Audio output
Number/signal type ................... 1 balanced/unbalanced; stereo for NTSC, PAL B/G, PAL D/K; mono only for PAL I
Connectors .................................... (1) 3.5 mm captive screw connector, 5 pole
Impedance .................................... 50 ohms unbalanced, 100 ohms balanced
Gain error ...................................... ± 0.5 dB channel to channel
Nominal level ............................... 0 dBu
Output level .................................. 1 Vrms (max.)
Control/remote — AVT 100
Serial control port ........................ RS-232; 3.5 mm captive screw connector,
5 pole
Baud rate and protocol ............... 9600 baud, 8 data bits, 1 stop bit, no parity
Serial/IR control pin configurations
1 = TX, 2 = RX, 3 = GND, 4 = modulated
IR, 5 = +12 VDC
IR controller module ................... AVT Remote (optional)
30' maximum, 40 degrees off axis
Program control ........................... Extron’s control/configuration program for Windows ®
Extron’s Simple Instruction Set (SIS ™ )
General
External power supply ............... 100 VAC to 240 VAC, 50/60 Hz, external, autoswitchable; to 12 VDC, 1 A (max.), regulated
Power input requirements ......... 12 VDC, 0.5 A
Temperature/humidity .............. Storage: -40 to +158 °F (-40 to +70 °C) /
10% to 90%, noncondensing
Operating: +32 to +122 °F (0 to +50 °C) /
10% to 90%, noncondensing
Cooling .......................................... Convection, unvented
Rack mount ................................... Yes, with optional 1U, 9.5" deep rack shelf,
(RSU 129, part #60-190-01 or RSB 129,
#60-604-01)
Enclosure type .............................. Metal
AVT 100 • S pecifications, Parts, and Accessories A-3
Specifications, Parts, and Accessories, cont’d
Enclosure dimensions ................. 1.7" H x 4.3" W x 6.7" D (1U high, quarter rack wide)
4.3 cm H x 10.9 cm W x 17.0 cm D
(Depth excludes connectors.)
Product weight ............................. 0.8 lbs (0.4 kg)
Shipping weight .......................... 3 lbs (2 kg)
Vibration ....................................... ISTA 1A in carton (International Safe
Transit Association)
Compliances ................................. CE, FCC Class A, VCCI, AS/NZS, ICES
MTBF ............................................. 30,000 hours
Warranty ....................................... 3 years parts and labor
N
All nominal levels are at ±10%.
N
Specifications are subject to change without notice.
A-4 AVT 100 • S pecifications, Parts, and Accessories
Models
Model
AVT 100 - NTSC Version
AVT 100 - PAL Version
Part number
60-647-01
60-647-02
Included Parts
These items are included in each order for an AVT 100:
Item
Windows-based control software on disk
Power cord
Tweeker (small screwdriver)
Rubber feet (not attached)
AVT 100 User’s Manual
External power supply
5-pole captive screw connector
Part number
10-319-10LF
Optional Accessories
These items can be ordered separately:
Accessory
1U, 9.5" Deep RSU 129 Universal Rack
Shelf Kit
1U, 9.5" Deep RSB 129 Basic Rack Shelf
AVT 100 IR Remote kit
IR Link (black, white, RAL9010 white)
CTL Series Comm-Link cable
CTLP Series Comm-Link cable
Part number
60-190-01
60-604-01
70-366-01
60-404-02, -03,
-05
22-148-02, -03
22-119-xx
22-461-xx
AVT 100 • S pecifications, Parts, and Accessories A-5
Specifications, Parts, and Accessories, cont’d
AVT 100
B
Channel Frequencies
PAL Format Channels
NTSC Format Channels
A-6 AVT 100 • S pecifications, Parts, and Accessories
Channel Frequencies
PAL Format Channels
The table on the following pages lists all the antenna and CATV channels that are available through the AVT 100 in areas using the PAL standard.
The AVT 100 display shows only whole numbers; it does not show decimal fractions. Therefore, when a PAL channel number is displayed, it does not reflect the exact frequency of that channel. To find out the exact tuning frequency for a PAL channel, locate the channel number in the Channel column, then find its frequency (stated in MHz) beside it in the Freq (MHz) column.
Example: The frequency for channel 82 is 82.25 MHz.
B-2 AVT 100 • Channel Frequencies
PAL channels
74
75
76
77
78
71
72
73
66
67
68
69
70
63
64
65
58
59
60
61
62
55
56
57
Channel
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
87
88
89
90
91
92
84
85
86
79
80
81
82
83
71.25
72.25
73.25
74.25
75.25
76.25
77.25
78.25
63.25
64.25
65.25
66.25
67.25
68.25
69.25
70.25
Freq (MHz)
48.25
49.25
50.25
51.25
52.25
53.25
54.25
55.25
56.25
57.25
58.25
59.25
60.25
61.25
62.25
79.25
80.25
81.25
82.25
83.25
84.25
85.25
86.25
87.25
88.25
89.25
90.25
91.25
92.25
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
Channel
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
132
133
134
135
136
137
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
AVT 100 • Channel Frequencies
124.25
125.25
126.25
127.25
128.25
129.25
130.25
131.25
132.25
133.25
134.25
135.25
136.25
137.25
116.25
117.25
118.25
119.25
120.25
121.25
122.25
123.25
108.25
109.25
110.25
111.25
112.25
113.25
114.25
115.25
Freq (MHz) Channel Freq (MHz)
93.25
138 138.25
94.25
139 139.25
95.25
96.25
97.25
98.25
99.25
140
141
142
143
144
140.25
141.25
142.25
143.25
144.25
100.25
101.25
102.25
103.25
104.25
105.25
106.25
107.25
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
145.25
146.25
147.25
148.25
149.25
150.25
151.25
152.25
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161.25
162.25
163.25
164.25
165.25
166.25
167.25
168.25
153.25
154.25
155.25
156.25
157.25
158.25
159.25
160.25
177
178
179
180
181
182
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
169.25
170.25
171.25
172.25
173.25
174.25
175.25
176.25
177.25
178.25
179.25
180.25
181.25
182.25
B-3
Channel Frequencies, cont’d
B-4
PAL channels (continued)
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
Channel
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
Channel
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
207.25
208.25
209.25
210.25
211.25
212.25
213.25
214.25
199.25
200.25
201.25
202.25
203.25
204.25
205.25
206.25
Freq (MHz)
183.25
184.25
185.25
186.25
187.25
188.25
189.25
190.25
191.25
192.25
193.25
194.25
195.25
196.25
197.25
198.25
215.25
216.25
217.25
218.25
219.25
220.25
221.25
222.25
223.25
224.25
225.25
226.25
227.25
260.25
261.25
262.25
263.25
264.25
265.25
266.25
267.25
268.25
269.25
270.25
271.25
272.25
252.25
253.25
254.25
255.25
256.25
257.25
258.25
259.25
244.25
245.25
246.25
247.25
248.25
249.25
250.25
251.25
Freq (MHz) Channel Freq (MHz)
228.25
229.25
230.25
273
274
275
273.25
274.25
275.25
231.25
232.25
233.25
234.25
235.25
276
277
278
279
280
276.25
277.25
278.25
279.25
280.25
236.25
237.25
238.25
239.25
240.25
241.25
242.25
243.25
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
281.25
282.25
283.25
284.25
285.25
286.25
287.25
288.25
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297.25
298.25
299.25
300.25
301.25
302.25
303.25
304.25
289.25
290.25
291.25
292.25
293.25
294.25
295.25
296.25
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
305.25
306.25
307.25
308.25
309.25
310.25
311.25
312.25
313.25
314.25
315.25
316.25
317.25
AVT 100 • Channel Frequencies
PAL channels (continued)
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
336
337
338
339
340
331
332
333
334
335
Channel
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
357
358
359
360
361
362
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
349.25
350.25
351.25
352.25
353.25
354.25
355.25
356.25
357.25
358.25
359.25
360.25
361.25
362.25
341.25
342.25
343.25
344.25
345.25
346.25
347.25
348.25
331.25
332.25
333.25
334.25
335.25
336.25
337.25
338.25
339.25
340.25
Freq (MHz) Channel Freq (MHz) Channel
318.25
363 363.25
408
319.25
364 364.25
409
320.25
321.25
322.25
365
366
367
365.25
366.25
367.25
410
411
412
323.25
324.25
325.25
326.25
327.25
328.25
329.25
330.25
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
368.25
369.25
370.25
371.25
372.25
373.25
374.25
375.25
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
381
382
383
384
385
376
377
378
379
380
376.25
377.25
378.25
379.25
380.25
381.25
382.25
383.25
384.25
385.25
386.25
387.25
388.25
389.25
390.25
391.25
392.25
393.25
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
426
427
428
429
430
421
422
423
424
425
402
403
404
405
406
407
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
394.25
395.25
396.25
397.25
398.25
399.25
400.25
401.25
402.25
403.25
404.25
405.25
406.25
407.25
447
448
449
450
451
452
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
431.25
432.25
433.25
434.25
435.25
436.25
437.25
438.25
421.25
422.25
423.25
424.25
425.25
426.25
427.25
428.25
429.25
430.25
Freq (MHz)
408.25
409.25
410.25
411.25
412.25
413.25
414.25
415.25
416.25
417.25
418.25
419.25
420.25
439.25
440.25
441.25
442.25
443.25
444.25
445.25
446.25
447.25
448.25
449.25
450.25
451.25
452.25
AVT 100 • Channel Frequencies B-5
Channel Frequencies, cont’d
PAL channels (continued)
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
Channel
453
454
455
456
457
458
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
483.25
484.25
485.25
486.25
487.25
488.25
489.25
490.25
491.25
492.25
493.25
494.25
495.25
496.25
497.75
475.25
476.25
477.25
478.25
479.25
480.25
481.25
482.25
467.25
468.25
469.25
470.25
471.25
472.25
473.25
474.25
Freq (MHz) Channel
453.25
498
454.25
455.25
499
500
456.25
457.25
458.25
501
502
503
459.25
460.25
461.25
462.25
463.25
464.25
465.25
466.25
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
520.25
521.25
522.25
523.25
524.25
525.25
526.25
527.25
512.25
513.25
514.25
515.25
516.25
517.25
518.25
519.25
Freq (MHz)
498.25
499.25
500.25
501.25
502.25
503.25
504.25
505.25
506.25
507.25
508.25
509.25
510.25
511.25
528.25
529.25
530.25
531.25
532.25
533.25
534.25
535.25
536.25
537.25
538.25
539.25
540.25
541.25
542.25
B-6 AVT 100 • Channel Frequencies
565.25
566.25
567.25
568.25
569.25
570.25
571.25
572.25
557.25
558.25
559.25
560.25
561.25
562.25
563.25
564.25
Freq (MHz)
543.25
544.25
545.25
546.25
547.25
548.25
549.25
550.25
551.25
552.25
553.25
554.25
555.25
556.25
573.25
574.25
575.25
576.25
577.25
578.25
579.25
580.25
581.25
582.25
583.25
584.25
585.25
586.25
587.25
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
Channel
543
544
545
546
547
548
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
PAL channels (continued)
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
Channel
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
617.25
618.25
619.25
620.25
621.25
622.25
623.25
624.25
625.25
626.25
627.25
628.25
629.25
630.25
631.25
632.25
609.25
610.25
611.25
612.25
613.25
614.25
615.25
616.25
601.25
602.25
603.25
604.25
605.25
606.25
607.25
608.25
Freq (MHz) Channel
588.25
589.25
633
634
590.25
591.25
592.25
635
636
637
593.25
594.25
595.25
596.25
597.25
598.25
599.25
600.25
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
672
673
674
675
676
677
667
668
669
670
671
662
663
664
665
666
Freq (MHz) Channel
633.25
678
634.25
635.25
636.25
637.25
679
680
681
682
638.25
639.25
640.25
683
684
685
641.25
642.25
643.25
644.25
645.25
686
687
688
689
690
646.25
647.25
648.25
649.25
650.25
691
692
693
694
695
651.25
652.25
653.25
696
697
698
654.25
655.25
656.25
657.25
658.25
699
700
701
702
703
659.25
660.25
661.75
704
705
706
662.25
663.25
664.25
665.25
666.25
707
708
709
710
711
667.25
668.25
669.25
670.25
712
713
714
715
671.25
672.25
673.25
674.25
675.25
676.25
677.25
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
AVT 100 • Channel Frequencies
699.25
700.25
701.25
702.25
703.25
704.25
705.25
706.25
691.25
692.25
693.25
694.25
695.25
696.25
697.25
698.25
Freq (MHz)
678.25
679.25
680.25
681.25
682.25
683.25
684.25
685.25
686.25
687.25
688.25
689.25
690.25
707.25
708.25
709.25
710.25
711.25
712.25
713.25
714.25
715.25
716.25
717.25
718.25
719.25
720.25
721.25
722.25
B-7
Channel Frequencies, cont’d
B-8
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
Channel
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
PAL channels (continued)
Freq (MHz) Channel
723.25
724.25
768
769
725.25
726.25
727.25
770
771
772
728.25
729.25
773
774
730.25
731.25
732.25
775
776
777
733.25
734.25
778
779
735.25
736.25
737.25
780
781
782
738.25
739.25
740.25
783
784
785
741.25
742.25
786
787
743.75
744.25
745.25
788
789
790
746.25
747.25
748.25
791
792
793
749.25
750.25
794
795
751.25
752.25
753.25
796
797
798
754.25
755.25
756.25
799
800
801
757.25
758.25
802
803
759.25
760.25
761.25
804
805
806
762.25
763.25
764.25
807
808
809
765.25
766.25
810
811
767.25
812
799.25
800.25
801.25
802.25
803.25
804.25
805.25
806.25
807.25
808.25
809.25
810.25
811.25
812.25
791.25
792.25
793.25
794.25
795.25
796.25
797.25
798.25
783.25
784.25
785.25
786.25
787.25
788.25
789.25
790.25
773.25
774.25
775.25
776.25
777.25
778.25
779.25
780.25
781.25
782.25
Freq (MHz) Channel
768.25
813
769.25
770.25
771.25
772.25
814
815
816
817
823
824
825
826
827
818
819
820
821
822
836
837
838
839
840
841
842
843
828
829
830
831
832
833
834
835
844
845
846
847
848
849
850
851
852
853
854
855
AVT 100 • Channel Frequencies
837.25
838.25
839.25
840.25
841.25
842.25
843.25
844.25
829.25
830.25
831.25
832.25
833.75
834.25
835.25
836.25
845.25
846.25
847.25
848.25
849.25
850.25
851.25
852.25
853.25
854.25
855.25
Freq (MHz)
813.25
814.25
815.25
816.25
817.25
818.25
819.25
820.25
821.25
822.25
823.25
824.25
825.25
826.25
827.25
828.25
NTSC Format Channels
The tables on the following pages list all the antenna (TV) and
CATV (cable) channels that are available through the AVT 100 in areas using the NTSC standard (including the US). Tables are included for four cable channel frequencies: standard, IRC,
HRC, and Japan standard.
The AVT 100 display shows the NTSC channel numbers. To find out the exact tuning frequency for a channel, locate the channel number in the Channel column, then find its frequency
(stated in MHz) beside it in the Freq (MHz) column.
AVT 100 • Channel Frequencies B-9
Channel Frequencies, cont’d
NTSC TV channels
B-10
477.25
483.25
489.25
495.25
501.25
507.25
513.25
519.25
525.25
531.25
537.25
543.25
549.25
555.25
55.25
61.25
67.25
77.25
83.25
175.25
181.25
187.25
193.25
199.25
205.25
211.25
471.25
561.25
567.25
573.25
579.25
585.25
591.25
597.25
603.25
609.25
615.25
621.25
627.25
633.25
639.25
645.25
651.25
657.25
AVT 100 • Channel Frequencies
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
5
6
7
8
9
2
3
4
42
43
44
45
38
39
40
41
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
663.25
669.25
675.25
681.25
687.25
693.25
699.25
705.25
711.25
717.25
723.25
729.25
735.25
741.25
747.25
753.25
759.25
765.25
771.25
777.25
783.25
789.25
795.25
801.25
Freq (MHz)
127.25
1 33 .25
1 3 9.25
145.25
151.25
157.25
16 3 .25
169.25
217.25
22 3 .25
229.25
2 3 5.25
241.25
247.25
55.25
61.25
67.25
77.25
83 .25
175.25
1 8 1.25
1 8 7.25
19 3 .25
199.25
205.25
211.25
121.25
25 3 .25
259.25
265.25
271.25
277.25
2 83 .25
2 8 9.25
295.25
3 01.25
3 07.25
3 1 3 .25
3 19.25
3 25.25
33 1.25
33 7.25
3 4 3 .25
3 49.25
Channel
24
25
26
27
2 8
29
3 0
17
1 8
19
20
21
22
2 3
14
15
16
10
11
12
1 3
7
8
5
6
9
2
3
4
42
4 3
44
45
38
3 9
40
41
3 1
3 2
33
3 4
3 5
3 6
3 7
NTSC cable channels — Standard frequency
Freq (MHz)
7 33 .25
7 3 9.25
745.25
751.25
757.25
76 3 .25
769.25
775.25
6 8 5.25
691.25
697.25
70 3 .25
709.25
715.25
721.25
727.25
7 8 1.25
7 8 7.25
79 3 .25
799.25
109.25
115.25
649.25
655.25
661.25
667.25
67 3 .25
679.25
619.25
625.25
6 3 1.25
6 3 7.25
64 3 .25
91.25
97.25
10 3 .25
Channel
112
11 3
114
115
116
117
11 8
105
106
107
10 8
109
110
111
119
120
121
122
12 3
124
125
9 8
99
100
101
102
10 3
104
94
95
96
97
90
91
92
9 3
Freq (MHz)
4 8 7.25
49 3 .25
499.25
505.25
511.25
517.25
52 3 .25
529.25
4 3 9.25
445.25
451.25
457.25
46 3 .25
469.25
475.25
4 8 1.25
3 55.25
3 61.25
3 67.25
3 7 3 .25
3 79.25
38 5.25
3 91.25
3 97.25
40 3 .25
409.25
415.25
421.25
427.25
4 33 .25
5 3 5.25
541.25
547.25
55 3 .25
559.25
565.25
571.25
577.25
5 83 .25
5 8 9.25
595.25
601.25
607.25
61 3 .25
Channel
74
75
76
70
71
72
7 3
65
66
67
6 8
69
61
62
6 3
64
54
55
56
57
5 8
59
60
46
47
4 8
49
50
51
52
5 3
8 4
8 5
8 6
8 7
88
8 9
77
7 8
79
8 0
8 1
8 2
83
AVT 100 • Channel Frequencies B-11
Channel Frequencies, cont’d
30
31
32
33
34
25
26
27
28
29
22
23
24
17
18
19
20
21
14
15
16
9
10
11
12
13
Channel
2
3
6
7
4
5
8
38
39
40
41
42
35
36
37
43
44
45
NTSC cable channels — IRC frequency
Freq (MHz) Channel
355.25
90
361.25
367.25
373.25
91
92
93
379.25
385.25
94
95
391.25
397.25
403.25
96
97
98
409.25
415.25
99
100
421.25
427.25
433.25
101
102
103
439.25
445.25
451.25
104
105
106
457.25
463.25
107
108
469.25
475.25
481.25
109
110
111
487.25
493.25
499.25
505.25
511.25
112
113
114
115
116
517.25
523.25
529.25
117
118
119
535.25
541.25
120
121
547.25
553.25
559.25
122
123
124
565.25
571.25
125
577.25
583.25
589.25
595.25
601.25
607.25
613.25
74
75
76
77
78
69
70
71
72
73
66
67
68
61
62
63
64
65
58
59
60
53
54
55
56
57
Channel
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
82
83
84
85
86
79
80
81
87
88
89
Freq (MHz)
247.25
253.25
259.25
265.25
271.25
277.25
283.25
289.25
157.25
163.25
169.25
217.25
223.25
229.25
235.25
241.25
295.25
301.25
307.25
313.25
319.25
325.25
331.25
337.25
343.25
349.25
205.25
211.25
121.25
127.25
133.25
139.25
145.25
151.25
55.25
61.25
67.25
79.25
85.25
175.25
181.25
187.25
193.25
199.25
B-12 AVT 100 • Channel Frequencies
727.25
733.25
739.25
745.25
751.25
757.25
763.25
769.25
775.25
781.25
679.25
685.25
691.25
697.25
703.25
709.25
715.25
721.25
787.25
793.25
799.25
Freq (MHz)
619.25
625.25
631.25
637.25
643.25
91.25
97.25
103.25
109.25
115.25
649.25
655.25
661.25
667.25
673.25
NTSC cable channels — HRC frequency
30
31
32
33
34
27
28
29
22
23
24
25
26
19
20
21
14
15
16
17
18
9
10
11
12
13
Channel
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
40
41
42
35
36
37
38
39
43
44
45
74
75
76
77
78
71
72
73
66
67
68
69
70
63
64
65
58
59
60
61
62
53
54
55
56
57
Channel
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
84
85
86
79
80
81
82
83
87
88
89
240.00
246.00
252.00
258.00
264.00
270.00
276.00
282.00
150.00
156.00
162.00
168.00
216.00
222.00
228.00
234.00
Freq (MHz)
54.00
60.00
66.00
78.00
84.00
174.00
180.00
186.00
192.00
198.00
204.00
210.00
120.00
126.00
132.00
138.00
144.00
288.00
294.00
300.00
306.00
312.00
318.00
324.00
330.00
336.00
342.00
348.00
504.00
510.00
516.00
522.00
528.00
534.00
540.00
546.00
456.00
463.00
468.00
474.00
480.00
486.00
492.00
498.00
Freq (MHz)
354.00
360.00
366.00
372.00
378.00
384.00
390.00
396.00
402.00
408.00
414.00
420.00
426.00
432.00
438.00
444.00
450.00
552.00
558.00
564.00
570.00
576.00
582.00
588.00
594.00
600.00
606.00
612.00
Channel
119
120
121
122
123
114
115
116
117
118
124
125
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
93
94
95
96
97
90
91
92
738.00
744.00
750.00
756.00
762.00
768.00
774.00
780.00
690.00
696.00
702.00
708.00
714.00
720.00
726.00
732.00
786.00
792.00
798.00
Freq (MHz)
618.00
624.00
630.00
636.00
642.00
90.00
96.00
102.00
108.00
114.00
648.00
654.00
660.00
666.00
672.00
678.00
684.00
AVT 100 • Channel Frequencies B-13
Channel Frequencies, cont’d
NTSC TV channels — Japan standard frequencies
B-14
483.25
489.25
495.25
501.25
507.25
513.25
519.25
525.25
531.25
537.25
543.25
549.25
555.25
561.25
91.25
97.25
103.25
171.25
177.25
183.25
189.25
193.25
199.25
205.25
211.25
217.25
471.25
477.25
567.25
573.25
579.25
585.25
591.25
597.25
603.25
609.25
615.25
621.25
627.25
633.25
639.25
645.25
651.25
657.25
AVT 100 • Channel Frequencies
27
28
29
30
24
25
26
20
21
22
23
17
18
19
13
14
15
16
10
11
12
8
9
6
7
3
4
1
2
5
41
42
43
44
38
39
40
34
35
36
37
31
32
33
56
57
58
52
53
54
55
59
60
61
62
49
50
51
45
46
47
48
663.25
669.25
675.25
681.25
687.25
693.25
699.25
705.25
711.25
717.25
723.25
729.25
735.25
741.25
747.25
753.25
759.25
765.25
25
26
27
28
22
23
24
18
19
20
21
15
16
17
11
12
13
14
8
9
10
6
7
4
5
1
2
3
39
40
41
42
36
37
38
43
44
32
33
34
35
29
30
31
NTSC cable channels — Japan standard frequencies
127.25
133.25
139.25
145.25
151.25
157.25
163.25
223.25
229.25
235.25
241.25
247.25
253.25
259.25
91.25
97.25
103.25
171.25
177.25
183.25
189.25
193.25
199.25
205.25
211.25
217.25
109.25
115.25
121.25
265.25
271.25
277.25
283.25
289.25
295.25
301.25
307.25
313.25
319.25
325.25
331.25
337.25
343.25
349.25
57
58
59
60
54
55
56
61
62
63
50
51
52
53
45
46
47
48
49
409.25
415.25
421.25
427.25
433.25
439.25
445.25
451.25
457.25
463.25
355.25
361.25
367.25
373.25
379.25
385.25
391.25
397.25
403.25
AVT 100 • Channel Frequencies B-15
Channel Frequencies, cont’d
This page was intentionally left blank.
B-16 AVT 100 • Channel Frequencies
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Table of contents
- 1 Outside cover
- 2 Inside cover
- 2 Precautions
- 3 FCC Class A Notice
- 2 Extron’s Warranty
- 4 Table of Contents
- 5 Ch. 1: Introduction
- 6 About This Manual
- 6 About the AVT 100 Demodulator
- 6 Models
- 6 Features
- 7 Application diagram
- 7 Ch. 2: Installation and Connection
- 8 Mounting the AVT 100
- 8 Tabletop use
- 8 Rack mounting
- 8 UL requirements for rack mounting
- 8 Rack mounting procedure
- 9 Rear Panel Features
- 10 Wiring and Connecting the RS-232 Cable
- 10 Connecting the AVT 100 to the IR Link
- 11 Connecting the AVT 100 to a MediaLink™ Controller
- 12 Ch. 3: Operation
- 13 Front Panel Features
- 13 Using the Control Buttons
- 13 Changing the channel
- 13 Initiating Auto-Scan
- 13 Adding and deleting channels
- 13 Special Functions
- 13 Locking front panel controls (executive mode)
- 14 Selecting tune or preset mode
- 14 Presets
- 14 Muting the audio and video outputs
- 14 Selecting the audio output mode
- 15 Selecting the PAL broadcasting standard
- 15 Selecting the cable TV frequency (NTSC only)
- 15 Using the IR Remote Control for AVT 100
- 15 Locking IR remote access
- 15 Installing batteries in the AVT 100 Remote
- 16 Buttons on the AVT 100 IR Remote Control
- 16 Selecting a channel (tuning) using the IR remote
- 17 Saving a preset using the IR remote
- 17 Ch. 4: Software Configuration andControl
- 18 Using Simple Instruction Set (SIS™) Commands
- 18 Host-to-AVT communications
- 18 AVT 100-initiated messages
- 18 Error responses
- 18 Using the command/response tables
- 19 Symbol definitions
- 19 Command/response table for SIS commands
- 21 Command/response table for special function SIScommands
- 23 Advanced Instruction Set commands
- 24 Windows®-Based Control/ConfigurationSoftware
- 24 Compatibility
- 24 Installing the software
- 25 Starting the software program
- 25 Using the Windows-based control software helpfile
- 26 Appendix A: Specifications, Parts, andAccessories
- 27 Specifications
- 28 Models
- 28 Included Parts
- 28 Optional Accessories
- 29 Appendix B: Channel Frequencies
- 30 PAL Format Channels
- 33 NTSC Format Channels
- 34 NTSC TV channels
- 34 NTSC cable channels — Standard frequency
- 35 NTSC cable channels — IRC frequency
- 35 NTSC cable channels — HRC frequency
- 36 NTSC TV channels — Japan standard frequencies
- 36 NTSC cable channels — Japan standard frequencies