Sonifex AVN-CU4-DANTE 4 Mic/Line input Commentator Unit, Dante®

Vendor: Sonifex
Sonifex AVN-CU4-DANTE 4 Mic/Line input Commentator Unit, Dante® A dual version of the AVN-CU2-DANTE, the AVN-CU4-DANTE is a configurable portable commentator unit with Dante® AoIP. It has four stereo headphone outputs with lockable...
$6,634.00

Sonifex AVN-CU4-DANTE 4 Mic/Line input Commentator Unit, Dante®

A dual version of the AVN-CU2-DANTE, the AVN-CU4-DANTE is a configurable portable commentator unit with Dante® AoIP. It has four stereo headphone outputs with lockable jack sockets and four mic/line inputs with a wide, adjustable gain range, making it suitable for use by three or four commentators.

With dual redundant Dante networking, numerous AC/DC/PoE power options, and multiple Dante AoIP and 4 wire connections, this fully featured machine can handle almost every commentary scenario. The utilization of up to 48 rotary encoders on inputs, outputs, or cross-points enables the integration of audio mixing, talkback feeds, and commentary into a single machine. With config files that can be stored and retrieved for rapid setup, it has been built from the ground up to be adaptable for many scenarios. In addition, if less technical commenters are using the device, buttons and rotary encoders can be locked out of operation. On the back panel, there are numerous 4-wire connections: an RJ45 AES3 stereo input and output, six analogue line outputs on XLR plugs, and four analogue line inputs on XLR sockets with latching locks. These connections have the ability to function as a Dante AoIP connections' simultaneous analog backup.

Comparison with AVN-CU2-DANTE

The featureset is as per the AVN-CU2-DANTE, with the following differences. There are two displays with a doubling of operational controls:

  • 4 x On-air buttons.
  • 4 x Page buttons, 2 for each half of the display.
  • 4 x Cough buttons.
  • 8 x Talkback buttons, up to 4 for each user.
  • 3 x User buttons.
  • 12 x rotary encoders.
  • 8 x pages of 6 rotary encoder positions (48 in total).

Similar to the AVN-CU2-DANTE, the illuminated ‘Sonifex’ logo acts as a power indication and illuminated LEDs indicate network clock status, AoIP Primary and AoIP Secondary link status, PoE Primary, PoE Secondary and AC power active. The front panel houses 4 x locking mic/line inputs with +48V phantom power indication and 4 x headphone outputs on locking 6.35mm jack sockets. The unit has dual redundant network ports on both RJ45 (PoE+ using 2 x Neutrik EtherCON® connectors) and SFP cages. To power the unit, as well as the dual PoE ports and 12V 4 pin XLR DC input, there is an AC mains input on an IEC inlet, with a universal supply.

Full Description

Up to 16 simultaneous input and output AoIP streams and up to 16 input and output AoIP channels are supported by the device. The built-in web GUI is used to perform more extensive configuration once the Dante® Controller is used for the first stream setup to and from the unit. The outstanding mix engine, which sits on top of the standard Dante® Controller settings, is what gives this unit its power. After creating Dante® flows, inputs and outputs can be freely blended to physical or AoIP inputs and outputs. This can be done by utilizing rotary encoders and programmable buttons, which can be used to control the gain and pan of inputs, outputs, or cross-points, giving complete freedom for various scenarios.

It can be used in any number of different commentary situations, controlled manually or remotely and controls can be ‘locked down’ so that they can’t be tampered with or altered, to guarantee reliable operation. Housed in a rugged and intuitive, user-friendly package, it’s a truly different way of looking at how commentary units should operate. Traditional commentary units have fixed analogue and digital I/O and fixed controls in fixed positions on the unit. Their inputs and outputs are defined at hardware design and are thus limited by that initial design, including limited routing, mixing and DSP of the audio pathways. We’ve taken a different approach with the AVN-CU4-DANTE. It was designed from the ground up to be totally flexible in operation and the use of Dante AoIP means that inputs and outputs can be added as required (up to a max of 16 per unit). Because any physical analogue or digital input can be mixed and routed with any Dante AoIP input to any physical output or Dante output, you can define your own audio pathways. Additionally you can choose which of those pathways need to be controlled (volume and pan) by the use of rotary encoders. Using a built-in web GUI, up to 8 nameable pages of 6 rotary encoders (48 in total) can be placed on the mix matrix at inputs, outputs or cross-points. Encoders can control the volume and pan of headphones and volume of inputs, outputs or cross-points. Each rotary encoder has a separate colour-coded meter section showing the channel name, detailed level metering and left/right panning on a bright daylight reading display. Colours can be programmed per encoder to quickly identify particular source groups, so headphone source selection becomes intuitive.

The unit can be fully remotely controlled from the web interface, which mimics the front panel of the unit and includes live metering. All the controls can be operated as if at the unit and there are front-panel lock-out options for every button and encoder, with ‘quick lock-out’ for the rows of buttons and pages of encoders. This allows you to configure the unit for simple operation by the talent but with more complex setups, say, for mixing the talkback or feeds from an OB truck. The AVN-CU4-DANTE provides four locking mic/line inputs, each with +48V phantom power indication and a wide, adjustable gain range. It has four stereo headphone outputs with locking 6.35mm jack sockets, suitable for operation by four commentators. It’s powered using Power over Ethernet (PoE), using Neutrik EtherCON® connectors, with primary and secondary ports for power and data redundancy. There’s an additional 4 pin XLR 12V DC input and an AC mains input on an IEC inlet, with a universal supply. The unit supports up to 16 input and output AoIP channels and up to 16 simultaneous input and output AoIP streams.

The 12 x push-button rotary encoders and 24 x key-cap buttons are fully configurable, to control input & output levels and panning. The 12 key-cap buttons can have different colours for the on and off functions. Metering is available per input/output, with output metering configurable as pre or post level adjustment. The top of the display shows output metering, a limiter indication and the name of the output. An adjustable limiter is available on every output and is applied automatically to prevent signal clipping. The unit has 4 x locking mic/line inputs with +48V phantom power indication and 4 x headphone outputs on locking 6.35mm jack sockets.

Four wire connections on the rear panel provide a number of ways of linking to the outside world. There are:

  • 4 x analogue line inputs on XLR sockets with latching locks
  • 6 x analogue line outputs on XLR plugs
  • 1 x RJ45 AES3 stereo input
  • 1 x RJ45 AES3 stereo output

The I/O can be assigned as programme inputs, talkback inputs, mic outputs (line level), PA outputs, zone outputs or talkback outputs, as desired. In addition, the AES/analogue connections can be used as an insert or exit point into/out from the AoIP network.

The unit has dual redundant network ports on both RJ45 (PoE using 2 x Neutrik EtherCON® connectors) and SFP cages for long fibre runs.

There are 10 x configurable GPIO on a 15 way D-type connector with 1 x switched changeover output. GPIO & VGPIO (virtual GPIO, i.e. network commands) can be configured on a matrix to visually show actions, combined with button presses and event triggers, such as input/output muting, which enables some automation. Button presses can control buttons and functions on other network connected AVN-CU units using VGPIO.

The complete configuration of the unit, including all encoder settings, button setups and Dante mix matrix audio routes, can be saved off to a text editable .json file. Up to 8 of these files can be stored on the unit and loaded from the main Menu, meaning that the unit can be pre-configured for any venue, or event and with these setups instantly recalled onsite.

All of the buttons have key-cap text and can be configured for any button in any position. There are some standard operations available:

  • 4 x On-Air buttons can be used to connect mic audio to the main output, either over AoIP or via the AES digital audio connection. The On-Air buttons can be locked if required.
  • A Menu button can be used to access limited setup options on the TFT display.
  • Page buttons change the display and encoders to monitor an additional set of sources, mix points or outputs.
  • Up to 8 pages can be pre-programmed, e.g. one for talkback inputs, one for outputs, one to monitor other sources.
  • 4 x Cough buttons take the commentator off-air while pressed.
  • 3 x User buttons can be programmed to perform any function, using the web server.
  • 8 x T/B (talkback) buttons can be configured to initiate talkback over AoIP, analogue or AES digital audio connections, using 4 x talkback buses. The talkback buttons operate with lazy talkback, taking the commentator off-air when invoked.
  • 12 x rotary encoders.
  • 8 x pages of 6 rotary encoder positions (48 in total).

The illuminated ‘Sonifex’ logo acts as a power indication and there are illuminated LEDs to indicate network clock status, AoIP Primary and AoIP Secondary link status, PoE Primary, PoE Secondary and AC/DC power active.