Originally posted by Dave Macaulay
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Dolby CP850 used
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Originally posted by Stefan Scholz View Post
I do have a similar problem in a site, classic film projection, analog out from the film sound processing. The CP 950 has 8 AES 3 pair as an input, film in 7.1 (3.4.1) configuration occupies 4. The remaining ones can be fed over a "A to D converter" with the film signals. If required, a passive input switch can be used to select the source.
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I imagine there is an external device that can handle 8 distinct pairs and reclock them, maybe even to an external clock source?
We have similar upgrades looming need to preserve our film capacity, but word on the street Q-SYS is in the running. ATMOS is also being considered (though seems less likely considering our venue architecture and minimal number of ATMOS titles we would screen).
The setup stephan describes is similar to how our current booth works with an AP20.. 4 pairs for digital, 4 pairs for film.
EDIT (Removed the AES67 comments, as what is being considered is the AES in/out... not the network AES67/BluLink ports on the 950)
Perhaps something like a AES 2x4 distribution amp sitting before the 950 inputs solves a potential AES reference clock issue?
https://www.scmsinc.com/broadcast-to...amplifier.htmlLast edited by Ryan Gallagher; 08-14-2025, 09:55 AM.
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Originally posted by Ryan Gallagher View PostThe setup stephan describes is similar to how our current booth works with an AP20.. 4 pairs for digital, 4 pairs for film.
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Originally posted by Dave MacaulayAgreed. Base 950 with warranty and support for some years is a better idea. 850 is a good unit but you're paying to power the Atmos processor and hoping nothing fails soon.
Originally posted by Ryan GallagherI know how our DCI was integrated often confuse Dolby techs...Last edited by Leo Enticknap; 08-15-2025, 09:59 AM. Reason: Typo correction: changed "unintuitive" to "intuitive"
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Originally posted by Leo Enticknap View PostThey don't like AP20s, or at least they didn't when I worked at the Egyptian and they would be in to tune up for festivals. I couldn't work out if this was understandable frustration at the somewhat less than unintuitive VNC UI, or an expression of "How dare you have a non-Dolby processor in your house?" indignation.
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A combination of both, bot for sure the VNC interface is not really what I like. It is the combination of an extremely small segment on my 2 in 1 setup computer with a 3000 x 2000 resolution screen, with an extremely small cursor point, and the laggy action of the VNC connection. Combined with the not really intuitive arrangement of tuning/ crossover functions.
But is Dolby's actually better? At least it's a web server and proper full image on the screen.
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Originally posted by Stefan Scholz View PostA combination of both, bot for sure the VNC interface is not really what I like. It is the combination of an extremely small segment on my 2 in 1 setup computer with a 3000 x 2000 resolution screen, with an extremely small cursor point, and the laggy action of the VNC connection. Combined with the not really intuitive arrangement of tuning/ crossover functions.
But is Dolby's actually better? At least it's a web server and proper full image on the screen.
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It's many years since I've seriously used one, but my memory of the AP20's UI is not so much of a problem with its size, but that there are certain ways that the user interacts with it that are not immediately intuitive. Once you've figured it out, you're fine, but until then it can be a bit frustrating.
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