Advertisement
Products & Newsletters
Wheatstone Bridge
As part of the facility installation at Entercom Kansas City (profiled in the April issue of Radio magazine), we installed a Wheatstone Bridge router with G-series control surfaces. We knew that we wanted to build the facility around a router for maximum flexibility with our nine stations. These needs were met with the Bridge.
The system is built around card-configurable frames that can sample any combination of analog or digital audio sources and interface with logic control sources. Two frames can be connected to share as many as 64 sources and destinations using Wheatnet Audio Network cards and CAT-5e cable. As many as 48 frames can be connected using the Wheatnet Hub for a flexible and scalable building-wide system.
It wouldn't surprise me if the North Carolina-based company took inspiration from the hundreds of spans, viaducts and turntable drawbridges that surround the factory. The Bridge interconnects a family of audio interfaces and control devices into a cohesive and flexible system. Like islands, studios are no longer isolated or limited by cabling or router size.
Creating connections, processing audio and making future changes is easy when every audio source, destination or logic control resides in the same digital system. In our installation, Generation-series mixing surfaces take the place of the traditional console, and fader and switch commands are transmitted to their respective Bridge frame. Because no audio passes through the surface, all audio conditioning and mixing takes place within the digital confines of the frame.
| Performance at a glance |
|
Eight-channel microphone pre-amp boards
Eight stereo channel analog input and output boards Eight and 16 channel digital AES input and output boards Generation Series consoles in a variety of fader and output bus sizes TCP/IP-based remote control panels Extensive configuration, monitoring and control with XPoint GUI software Direct TCP/IP communication with many popular audio automation systems Wheatnet Hub 48-port centralized network controller |
Control logic such as remote microphone on, off, cough and talk back functions are digitized and routed just like its audio counterpart. Recently, Wheatstone developed a TCP/IP-based logic control so stand-alone, multi-button panels and computer automation systems can easily communicate to the Bridge over Ethernet.
At the heart of this system are two classes of interface processors: the Bridge, capable of processing 512 analog or digital audio sources, and its scaled-down cousin the Satellite. The Bridge frame is suited for centralized operations where a high volume of signal processing is concentrated in one or more rooms. The Satellite frame is a cost-effective interface for smaller studio settings with fewer audio sources. Both devices have essentially the same function, but have different audio signal-handling capacities.
Hardware
Each frame is configured with a CPU card and can be populated with a combination of mic pre-amp, line level analog, digital AES, logic and DSP mixing cards. Physical connections are made with 25-pin D-style, RJ-45 or BNC-type connectors.
The Microphone Card accepts eight mono microphone level (-50dBm) sources and provides eight mono direct outputs. The pre-amplified microphone signal is electronically balanced and introduced to a 24-bit A/D sampler set to the master clock rate. All eight digitized audio signals are inserted into a single Time Domain Multiplexing (TDM) channel on the router bus. The card also supplies 32V phantom power.
The Analog Eight Channel Stereo (16 mono) Input Card is a direct coupled, balanced input with a nominal level of +4dBu. Signals are buffered and digitized using 24-bit A/D converters. The Analog Eight Channel Stereo (16 Mono) Output Card can be configured in mono, stereo or 5.1 output modes. Outputs are direct coupled, balanced at 50Ω with a nominal level of +4dBu.
The Digital Eight or 16 Channel Input Card conforms to the AES-3 standard interface of +5V peak-to-peak balanced signal at 110Ω. Inputs are transformer balanced. The Digital Eight or 16 Channel Output Card also conforms to the AES-3 standard. Sample rates of 44.1kHz and 48kHz are set according to settings on the DSP card. There is an option for selecting an external clock source as well. Embedded channel status information is also transmitted with the audio such as channel mode, word length, sample, time of day and block CRC.
The Logic input/output card is a general-purpose interface (GPI) that hosts 12 independent, opto-isolated, solid-state relay inputs and outputs. Customer supplied +5 to +15Vdc is applied to a logic input. The state of that input can be cross connected to a logic output port or can be programmed as an inverted state of the input. Output logic can be programmed in a normally on, off or current state when disconnected from an input port.
The DSP card (digital signal processor) is used by the Bridge to condition and mix audio. In systems configured for radio, two processor cards are installed, one to pre-condition the incoming audio and the second one to perform the mixing bus function. Larger systems use a dedicated card for the master mix.
Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2008 Penton Media Inc.
Webinars
Critical Aspects of Tower Site Safety
Learn the steps you can take to ensure a safe working environment at a tower site.
33 1/3 Things You Forgot
Think wire is just wire? Think again.
Advertisement
Podcast Archives
Radio Currents Podcast, Nov 24
FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein seeks a PPM investigation, Nielsen steps into radio ratings with Cumulus, The NABEF seeks entires for the Celebration of Service to America Awards, Nautel opens a parts depot in Memphis, and Volvo makes HD Radio standard on nearly all models in 2009.
Radio Currents Podcast, Nov 17
Changes are expected in Washington when Obama takes office, Emmis Interactive signs several stations to its interactive platform and sales consulting services, MySimBook hires hired Doug Raines as vice president business development, and captioned HD Radio passes its test on election night.
Blog
Talkback: The Radio Blog
Talkback, the Radio magazine blog, is your chance to post and comment on technical issues in radio.
Projects in Progress
Projects in Progress tracks facility installation projects from start to finish. Follow the progress of the WUVT-FM transmitter site upgrade.
Today in Radio History
Milestones From Radio's Past
The history of radio broadcasting extends beyond the work of a few famous inventors.
Current Issue
Data Lifesaver
Without a doubt, we rely on data in virtually every facet of business and even in our personal lives.





