Videotek TVM9100PKG Installation And Operation Handbook

Videotek TVM9100PKG Installation And Operation Handbook

Tvm series multi-format 3gb/s/hd-sdi/sd-sdi monitor
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TVM Series
Multi-Format 3Gb/s/HD-SDI/SD-SDI Monitor
Installation and Operation Handbook
Printed November 2008
Item #061793 Rev. -
Copyright © 2008 by Harris Corporation.
All rights reserved.
Contents of this publication may not be reproduced in any form without permission of Harris Corporation.
This instrument, in whole or in part, may be protected by one or more US (US Patent 6,069,607) or foreign patents or
patent applications.
Specifications subject to change without notice.
IBM is a registered trademark of International Business Machines Corporation
PS2 is a registered trademark of International Business Machines Corporation
Dolby, AC-3, Dolby E, and the double D symbol are registered trademarks of Dolby Laboratories
Videotek and the Videotek logo are registered trademarks of Harris Corporation.
CineSound is a registered trademark of Harris Corporation.
IntelliMouse is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation

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Summary of Contents for Videotek TVM9100PKG

  • Page 1 PS2 is a registered trademark of International Business Machines Corporation Dolby, AC-3, Dolby E, and the double D symbol are registered trademarks of Dolby Laboratories Videotek and the Videotek logo are registered trademarks of Harris Corporation. CineSound is a registered trademark of Harris Corporation.
  • Page 3: Operator's Safety Summary

    Operator’s Safety Summary WARNING: These instructions are for use by qualified personnel only. To reduce the risk of electric shock, do not perform this installation or any servicing unless you are qualified to do so. Refer all servicing to qualified service personnel. Ensuring Safety •...
  • Page 4: Explanation Of Symbols

    Operator’s Safety Summary Explanation of Symbols These symbols may appear on Harris equipment: TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright © 2008, Harris Corporation...
  • Page 5: Directives And Compliances

    Directives and Compliances This section provides information concerning Harris Corporation compliance with EU Directive 2002/95/EC and EU Directive 2002/96/EC. Restriction on Hazardous Substances (RoHS) Directive 2002/95/EC Directive 2002/95/EC—commonly known as the European Union (EU) Restriction on Hazardous Substances (RoHS)—sets limits on the use of certain substances found in electrical and electronic equipment.
  • Page 6 Directives and Compliances In accordance with this EU Directive, Harris Corporation and other companies selling electric or electronic devices in the EU will affix labels indicating that such products must be properly recycled. (See the Harris Premier website for more information on dates and deadlines for compliance.) Contact your local Harris sales representative for information on returning these products for recycling.
  • Page 7: Table Of Contents

    Contents Operator’s Safety Summary................iii Ensuring Safety........................iii Explanation of Symbols....................... iv Directives and Compliances................v Restriction On Hazardous Substances (RoHS) Directive 2002/95/EC........v Waste From Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) Directive 2002/96/EC ....v Section 1 ♦ Introduction .................1 Product Description......................1 Standard Features .......................1 TVM Series Configuration ....................2 Console ..........................2 Graphics Engines (requires one) ..................2...
  • Page 8 Blanking (SDI Signals only)..................45 Component Sequence (SDI Signals only) ..............45 Center Waveform...................... 45 Waveform Setup....................... 45 Utilizing the EYE Display (TVM-VTM-EYE-H, TVM9100PKG-EH, TVM9100PKG-ES, TVM9140PKG-EH, TVM9140PKG-ES) ................45 Eye Pattern Observation ....................47 Eye Pattern Rise Time ....................48 Jitter Meter and Eye Pattern Correlation................
  • Page 9 Contents Jitter High Pass Filter (HPF) Selection................51 Trigger Mode.........................52 Eye Pattern Setup.....................52 Utilizing the EYE and Jitter Displays (TVM-VTM-JEM, TVM9100PKG-EJ, and TVM9140PKG-EJ) ......................52 Eye Pattern Measurement Parameters/Considerations..........59 Eye Pattern Parameters ....................59 Jitter Meter and Eye Pattern Correlation ................59 Horizontal Magnification and Zoom in Eye Pattern Mode ...........59 Eye Pattern Cursor Selections...................60...
  • Page 10 Contents Closed Caption ......................84 Timing Display ........................86 Things to Remember When Using the Timing Display ........... 88 Timing Pane Menu Selections..................89 Reference Selection....................89 Timing Mode......................89 Alarm Display ........................90 Alarm Log Display......................90 Alarm Status Display..................... 92 Alarm Log and Status Pane Menu Selections..............
  • Page 11 Contents ASI Menu Selections....................119 Embedded Audio Data ....................121 Multi-Screen Display Selection..................121 TVM Classic........................ 122 Data Analyzer Display (HD-SDI and SD-SDI Only) ............124 Pixel Cursor ......................126 Data Display Pop-Up Menu ..................126 Trigger on Alarm ..................... 127 Data Display Format ....................
  • Page 12 Contents Video Format Menu ....................172 Video A, B, C, or D Format..................172 Video A, B, C, or D Structure .................. 172 Dual Link ........................ 172 Source ID ....................... 173 Waveform Setup Menu ....................173 Digital Waveform Graticule..................173 NTSC Pedestal (or 7.5 IRE Setup)................
  • Page 13 Contents XDS ........................178 (Closed Caption) Size ..................... 179 Teletext Page......................179 Anamorphic......................179 Time Code ......................179 Brightness....................... 180 Contrast ........................180 (Picture) Color......................180 Blue Gun......................... 180 Red Gun ......................... 180 Green Gun......................180 VBI MASK....................... 180 Monitor Out/Generator A-B and C-D................180 Display Setup......................
  • Page 14 Contents Feature Upgrade from USB..................193 About .......................... 193 Section 5 ♦ Alarm Descriptions ..............195 Setting Alarms ......................... 195 Alarm Message Contents and Limitations ................ 196 Video Alarms Digital Descriptions ..................197 Format Change......................197 Payload Identifier Mismatch (TVM-VTM-3GB only)............197 Loss of Payload Identifier (TVM-VTM-3GB only) ............
  • Page 15 Contents Loss of Reference ....................... 202 Loss of Video ......................202 Analog Gamut ......................202 Peak Upper......................202 Peak Lower......................202 Luma Upper......................202 Luma Lower ......................202 Sync and Burst......................203 H (Horizontal) Sync Upper..................203 H (Horizontal) Sync Lower..................203 Burst Upper......................
  • Page 16 Contents Loss of Signal ......................206 CRC Change ......................206 ETR 290 1 Priority..................... 206 TS Sync Loss ......................206 Sync Byte Error ...................... 206 PAT Error ....................... 207 Continuity Count Error .................... 207 PMT Error....................... 207 PID Error ........................ 207 ETR 290 2 Priority ....................
  • Page 17 Contents Section 7 ♦ Troubleshooting..............219 Cold Starting the TVM...................... 219 Cold Start........................219 Warm Start........................219 Cold Start after VFlash ....................220 Problems, Causes, and Solutions..................220 Appendix A ♦ Specifications..............223 Video Input Specifications: 3G/HD-SDI/SD-SDI Option............. 223 Video Input Specifications: HD-SDI/SD-SDI Option ............223 Video Input Specifications: SD-SDI Option ...............
  • Page 18 Contents Cambridge Broadband Ltd. Copyright Notice (BSD) ............242 Sun Microsystems, Inc. Copyright Notice (BSD)............... 243 Sparta, Inc. Copyright Notice (BSD)................. 244 Cisco/BUPTNIC Copyright Notice (BSD)................245 Fabasoft R&D Software GmbH & Co. KG Copyright Notice (BSD)........246 The GNU v2 License......................247 GNU General Public License ..................
  • Page 19 Contents Figure 3-8. RGB and YC Zoom 0 mV Graticule..............36 Figure 3-9. RGB and YC Zoom 700 mV Graticule............36 Figure 3-10. Moving the Waveform ..................37 Figure 3-11. Establishing the Sweep Scale ................37 Figure 3-12. Establishing the Gain ..................39 Figure 3-13. Establishing Line Select ..................40 Figure 3-14.
  • Page 20 Contents Figure 3-46. Teletext Sample Screen..................86 Figure 3-47. Timing Display Diagram..................87 Figure 3-48. Alarm Log Diagram.................... 91 Figure 3-49. Alarm Status Display Diagram ................93 Figure 3-50. Two Bar Graph Display with Lissajous Diagram ..........98 Figure 3-51. Four Bar Graph with Lissajous Display Diagram ..........99 Figure 3-52.
  • Page 21 Contents Figure B-1. ANALOG AUDIO IN/OUT 37-pin, Male, D-sub Connector For Audio Options ..235 Figure B-2. DVI-I Out Connector..................236 Figure B-3. LTC/GPI 26-pin, Female, D-sub Connector............237 Figure B-4. LTC/GPI Breakout Board ................... 237 Figure B-5. Remote RJ-11 Control Connector..............238 Figure B-6.
  • Page 22 Contents Table 3-23. Description of Vector Display Diagram ..............64 Table 3-24. Vector Analog Pane Menu Structure ..............73 Table 3-25. Vector SD-SDI Pane Menu Structure ..............73 Table 3-26. Vector HD-SDI Pane Menu Structure ..............73 Table 3-27. Description of Gamut Display Diagram..............75 Table 3-28.
  • Page 23 Contents Table 3-61. Data Analyzer Display with TVM-VTM-3GB (Level B) ........131 Table 4-1. Setup Menu Tables..................... 142 Table 4-3. Waveform Setup Menu ..................147 Table 4-4. Eye Pattern Setup Menu ..................147 Table 4-5. Vector Setup Menu ..................... 148 Table 4-6.
  • Page 24 Contents This page is intentionally blank. xxiv TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright © 2008, Harris Corporation...
  • Page 25: Section 1 ♦ Introduction

    US Patents 6,069,607, 6,532,024, and 6,828,981. UK Patent 2,330,475. Other US and foreign patents pending. Standard Features • Dual HD-SDI/SD-SDI inputs with auto detection (TVM9100PKG or TVM9140PKG) • Dual 3GB/s/s/HD-SDI/SD-SDI inputs with auto detection (TVM9140PKG-3GB) •...
  • Page 26: Tvm Series Configuration

    Introduction • Customizable function display screen location, multiple displays • Alarms with Peak Level Report • Integral high resolution XGA TFT color LCD • Multiple reference inputs • USB port for control and data transfer • XGA, High Resolution, output for 4:3 or 16:9 display (DVI-I) •...
  • Page 27 Introduction pairs, and 16 channels of embedded audio. It provides analog monitoring outputs of up to eight channels simultaneously. • TVM-A3-OPT 3: The TVM-A3-OPT 3 is an advanced audio analysis option, which includes Bargraphs and CineSound®. It allows the user to view up to eight audio channels.
  • Page 28: Video Input Options (Supports Two)

    Introduction Video Input Options (supports two) • TVM-VTM-AAP: The TVM-VTM-AAP is an advanced analysis package that adds data analyzer functions in quadrant or full-screen views to the TVM-10. Included in TVM-40. • TVM-VTM-ASI: The TVM-VTM-ASI provides two passive-looping DVB-ASI and SMPTE310 inputs. It accepts two independent MPEG streams and analyzes one selected stream for compliance to measurement guidelines of ETSI TR-101- 290 (ETR-290) first, second, and third priority standards.
  • Page 29: Auxiliary Options

    • TVM-WRTY2: The TVM-WRTY2 option adds three years to the standard two- year warranty. TVM Package Configurations • TVM9100PKG: This TVM Series package includes the TVM-ASX (console), TVM-10 (one input source), and one TVM-VTM-SDI-H (SD/HD) input module. It displays one source input at a time and one instance of each function (Waveform/Vector/Picture/ Gamut/…etc.).
  • Page 30 Introduction Analysis), and one TVM-VTM-SDI-H (SD/HD) input module. The package is limited to SD/HD formats, but can be upgraded. • TVM9140PKG-3GB: This TVM Series package includes the TVM-ASX (console), TVM-40 (affords the ability for four source inputs simultaneously and Data Analysis), and one TVM-VTM-3GB input module. There are no format limitations on the VTM-9140 PKG-3GB.
  • Page 31: Video Standards Supported

    Introduction Video Standards Supported The TVM Series supports the following video standards: Table 1-1. Options and Supported Video Formats Video Formats ACV-2 SDI-S SDI-H EYE-S EYE-H DVB-ASI and SMPTE-310 Analog Composite SD-SDI HD-SDI 3 Gb/s-SDI Dual Link - YCbCr 10 Bit 4:4:4 Dual Link –RGB and With With...
  • Page 32: Table 1-2. 3Gb/S Formats

    Introduction Table 1-2. 3Gb/s Formats 10 bit 10 bit 10 bit 10 bit 10 bit 12 bit 12 bit 12 bit 4:4:4:4 Format 4:2:2 4:4:4 4:4:4 4:4:4:4 4:2:2 4:4:4 4:4:4 RGB+A 1080i 1080i/60 1080i/59.94 1080i/50 1080p 1080p/60 1080p/59.94 1080p/50 1080p/30 1080p/29.97 1080p/25 1080p/24...
  • Page 33: Table 1-3. Dual Link Formats

    Introduction Table 1-3. Dual Link Formats 10 bit 10 bit 10 bit 10 bit Formats 4:4:4 4:4:4:4 4:4:4 4:4:4:4 YCbCr YCbCr+A RGB+A 1080i/60 1080i/59.94 1080i/50 1080p/30 1080p/29.97 1080p/25 1080p/24 1080p/23.98 1080PsF/60 1080PsF/59.94 1080PsF/50 1080PsF/30 1080PsF/29.97 1080PsF/24 1080PsF/23.98 TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright ©...
  • Page 34: Figure 2-3. Tvm Dedicated Pc Connection

    Introduction Table 1-4. HD Formats Table 1-5. SD Formats 10 bit 10 bit 4:2:2 4:2:2 YCbCr YCbCr 1080i 525/59.94 1080I/60 625/50 1080I/59.94 1080I/50 Analog 1080p Table 1-6. Composite Formats Supported 1080P/30 1080P/29.97 NTSC 1080P/25 1080P/24 1080P/23.98 720p 720p/60 720p/59.94 720p/50 720p/30 720p/29.97 720p/24...
  • Page 35: Front And Back Panels

    Introduction Front and Back Panels The TVM front and back panels are illustrated in Figure 1-1. Figure 1-1. TVM Front and Back Panels TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright © 2008, Harris Corporation...
  • Page 36: Service And Support

    • To prevent shipping damage, pack the unit the same way Harris had packed it. If possible, use the original packing materials in the original shipping container. • Ship the unit to: Harris Corporation Videotek Test and Measurement 243 Shoemaker Road Pottstown, PA 19464-6433 Attn: RA xxxx (where x is the RA number) Email: BCDService@harris.com...
  • Page 37: Section 2 ♦ Installation

    Section 2 ♦ Installation This section provides information about inspecting, installing, and configuring the TVM. Inspecting the Shipment Before installing the TVM, inspect the box and the contents. Report any damage to the shipper and telephone the Harris Corporation Customer Service Department for service and support (see Section 1, “Service Support”).
  • Page 38: Rack Mounting The Tvm

    Installation Rack Mounting the TVM CAUTION: The TVM should not be installed in a DRC-1 case. If installed in a DRC-1 case, the unit will overheat. When selecting the permanent mounting location for the TVM, make sure that the flow of air to the ventilation holes on the top and sides of the chassis is not obstructed.
  • Page 39: Figure 3-1. Tvm Series Front Panel

    Installation Table 2-1. Parts Required to Rack Mount the TVM Using the DRC-2A Item Number Quantity Description 831064 4(*) #8–32×1/2-in. PP screws 831114 4(*) #8 Ext. tooth lock washers 831019 4 (2 each side) Nylon washer, rack mount * Hardware used to secure test equipment into DRC-2A. To rack mount the TVM, follow these steps: 1.
  • Page 40: Connecting The Tvm

    Installation Connecting the TVM The back panel connectors are illustrated in Figure 2-2, and the function of each connector is described in Table 2-2. Figure 2-2. TVM Back Panel Connectors Table 2-2. Description of Back Panel Connectors Label Description ANALOG AUDIO IN/OUT Optional 37-pin, D-sub, male connector;...
  • Page 41 Installation Table 2-2. Description of Back Panel Connectors Label Description A/B MON OUT Female BNC connector for monitoring of the selected A or B input If both digital A + B inputs are selected, the output is input A (this output is a source monitor only and does not include the waveform, vector, audio, or alarm on-screen information)
  • Page 42: Ethernet Setup

    Installation Ethernet Setup 1. Prior to TVM Network configuration, obtain Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) addresses from the System Administrator or from the Internet Service Provider (ISP). These addresses are a static IP address (unless Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) will be used), a Subnet Mask, and an optional Gateway IP.
  • Page 43 Installation Figure 2-4. TVM Network PC Connection 4. Ethernet Configuration a) Press the SETUP button on the TVM front panel. b) Press the UP/DOWN button to highlight the COMMUNICATIONS menu, and then press the ENTER button to enter the submenu. c) Press the UP/DOWN button until the IP CONFIGURATION submenu is highlighted.
  • Page 44: Configuring The Tvm For Remote Control

    Installation Configuring the TVM for Remote Control The configuration shown in Figure 2-5 is for one PC running multi-connection software and equipped with a Network Interface Card (NIC) connected to multiple TVMs and VTMs. The interconnecting cables can be extended using electronic distribution.
  • Page 45 Installation The flat cable shown in Figure 2-6 is a straight through cable. See the RCU 1000 Installation and Operation Handbook for more information on the RCU 1000. Figure 2-6. Connecting the RCU 1000 Remote Control Panel to Multiple TVM/VTM Series Units TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright ©...
  • Page 46 Installation This page is intentionally blank. TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright © 2008, Harris Corporation...
  • Page 47: Section 3 ♦ General Operation

    Section 3 ♦ General Operation Terms The following terms are used in this section: • Display: The output at the Front LCD or XGA/DVI connector • Full: Full-screen display of the selected pane (non quad or multi display) • Multi: A multi-quadrant screen that contains preconfigured screens for VTM Classic, Data Analyzer, Custom Timing, Waveform-Vector screens, and 3 Gb/s WFM/VEC (with TVM-VTM-3GB only) •...
  • Page 48: Types Of Controls

    General Operation Figure 3-2. Sample Multi-Display Types of Controls The TVM is controlled in three ways: • Quick Controls: Controls on the front panel that adjust parameters that are frequently used. • Pane Menu Settings: Pop-up menus within a pane that are used to control the parameters for the individual pane.
  • Page 49: Sleep Mode

    General Operation Table 3-1. Description of Front Panel Controls Illumination Heading (Group) Description • STEP: When the button is high tally, X2.5, X5, or X15 is active. When the GAIN button is low tally, X1 gain is active. • VAR: The button is high tally when in variable mode. The button is low tally when not in variable mode.
  • Page 50: Selecting A Pane

    General Operation Selecting a Pane When multiple panes are displayed, only one pane can be selected at a time. The active pane is highlighted with a bright colored border. Press the desired Display button to select the active pane to be configured, as shown in Figure 3-3. Figure 3-3.
  • Page 51: Format Mismatch Message

    General Operation Format Mismatch Message When selecting A+B or C+D while the inputs are in different formats, the message FORMAT MISMATCH is displayed. The inputs must be changed to the same video format if both inputs are to function simultaneously. Linking Panes Hold the A, B, C, or D input button for two seconds to enable the Link inputs pop-up menu selection.
  • Page 52: External Reference

    General Operation Press to move up in the menu or submenu. Press to move right to the next submenu. Press to move out of the submenu. Press to move down in the menu or submenu. - Rotate the knob to move the menu cursor up and down or to change a value or condition in a menu.
  • Page 53: Ext Setup

    General Operation Table 3-2. EXT Menu Selection Selection Option EXTERNAL LOOP (Default) REFERENCE SPLIT – FOLLOW SPLIT – BB SPLIT - TRI SETUP Press ENT External Reference NOTE: 1080p 50/59.94/60 Hz tri-level Sync is not supported. The External Reference submenu is used to set the external reference input as a looping input (one input) or a split input (two inputs).
  • Page 54: Main Title Bar

    General Operation Figure 3-4. Sample Quad Diagram Figure 3-5. Full-Screen Display Diagram Main Title Bar The main title bar is displayed at the top of the screen, and contains the Company name, date and time, icon indictors, most current alarm (alarm background color is yellow when active), and the model name.
  • Page 55: Status Bar

    General Operation Table 3-3. Description of Icons Icon Condition Panel Lock engaged Aural Alert silenced (No Sound) RCU connected and active. The RCU icon replaces the Alarm condition active icon when the RCU is connected and active. External USB device connected Inputs not linked (broken link) Alarm condition active DISP or SDI data is frozen in memory.
  • Page 56: Table 3-5. Video Formats And Critical Amplitude Limits

    General Operation Table 3-5. Video Formats and Critical Amplitude Limits Video Format Critical Amplitude Limits 0.6125 V = upper 75% chroma limit High Definition and Standard Definition 0.525 V = 75% luminance limit 0.350 V = 50% point; black for color difference channels 0.0875 V = lower 75% chroma limit Standard Definition 525 as Composite (NTSC)
  • Page 57 General Operation Table 3-6. Description of Waveform Display Diagram Field Field information Nomenclature Identifier • Filter Displayed as FLT, LP, CHR, BOW (Bowtie), R-Y • This can be selected in the COMPOSITE or COMPONENT FILTER submenu of the WFM Pane menu Standard Displays the Line Rate/Frame Rate [1080i/59.94];...
  • Page 58: Waveform Front Panel Selections

    General Operation Figure 3-7. RGB and YC Graticule Figure 3-8. RGB and YC Zoom 0 mV Graticule Figure 3-9. RGB and YC Zoom 700 mV Graticule Waveform Front Panel Selections The following buttons directly affect the waveform display. Moving the Waveform using the Setup Knobs Move the Waveform display relative to the graticule by using the LEFT and RIGHT arrow Knob (for horizontal movement) and the UP and DOWN knob (for vertical movement), as shown in Figure 3-10.
  • Page 59: Sweep Buttons

    General Operation direction. Centering the waveform can also be performed by using the Waveform pane menu (by pressing and holding the WFM button). Figure 3-10. Moving the Waveform Sweep Buttons The Sweep buttons are used to determine the sweep rate scale. The scale is displayed in the upper-right area of the waveform pane, as shown in Figure 3-11.
  • Page 60 General Operation In the SWEEP group, press the H button to select one of the horizontal sweep modes. Also, press the H button to step through each component in a signal. The Components that are utilized with the H button can be selected and deselected in the COMPONENT SEQUENCE pane menu.
  • Page 61: Gain Buttons

    General Operation Figure 3-12. Establishing the Gain Gain Buttons Gain is used to set the range of the vertical amplification in the video signal. The standard gain in the video signal is x1. The TVM can be used to set the gain amplification in the video signal using the Gain group of buttons.
  • Page 62: Placing The Waveform Display In Line Select Mode

    General Operation gain returns to the previously fixed gain. Pressing the STEP button while in variable gain returns the gain to x1.00. Press the ZOOM button to cycle through one of three display options: • ZOOM positioned on the 0 IRE, 0 mV, or 0% graticule line •...
  • Page 63: Waveform Pane Menu Selections

    General Operation Figure 3-14. Establishing Cursor Select To enable the time and/or amplitude cursors, press and hold the CURS button. Use the NAVIGATION buttons or knobs to highlight Amplitude or Time. Once selected, press the ENT button to enable it. Once one or both cursors are selected, press the EXIT button to exit the CURS pane menu.
  • Page 64: Table 3-7. Waveform (Analog) Menu Structure

    General Operation NOTE: The component sequence selections are dynamically dependent on the SD or HD format selection. The component selections will only be shown when the component formats are selected. Table 3-7. Waveform (Analog) Menu Structure Selection Selection Option COMPOSITE FILTER FLT (FLAT) LP (LOW PASS) CHR (CHROMA )
  • Page 65: Table 3-9. Waveform (3Gb/Hd-Sdi) Menu Structure

    General Operation Table 3-8. Waveform (SD-SDI) Menu Structure Selection Selection Option Selection Option If YRGB is selected (Y, R G B) CENTER WAVEFORM Press ENT WAVEFORM SETUP Press ENT Table 3-9. Waveform (3Gb/HD-SDI) Menu Structure Selection Selection Option Selection Option COMPOSITE FILTER (for FLAT (FLT) digital formats)
  • Page 66: Filter Selection

    General Operation Filter Selection The filters available are dependent upon the input format. The filters available are: • Flat: No filtering. • Low Pass: Selects the Low Pass filter. • Chroma: Selects the Chroma filter. • F/LP: Selects Flat and Low Pass filtering •...
  • Page 67: Component Sequence (Sdi Signals Only)

    Press the ENT button to access the global Waveform setup menu. For more information on the global Waveform Setup menu see Section 4. Utilizing the EYE Display (TVM-VTM-EYE-H, TVM9100PKG-EH, TVM9100PKG-ES, TVM9140PKG-EH, TVM9140PKG-ES) NOTE: Available for Inputs A and B only.
  • Page 68: Table 3-11. Description Of Eye Pattern Display Diagram

    General Operation Figure 3-15. Eye Pattern Display Diagram Table 3-11. Description of Eye Pattern Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Amplitude cursor readout Displays the amplitude cursor as AMP and the number in mV Input Displays the user-configurable source IDs for the input and routers Standard Line rate/Frame rate...
  • Page 69: Eye Pattern Observation

    General Operation Figure 3-16 to Figure 3-18 display the Eye pattern graticules. Figure 3-16. Eye Pattern Graticule Figure 3-17. Eye Pattern Graticule at Zoom 0V Figure 3-18. Eye Pattern Graticule at Zoom 800 mV Eye Pattern Observation The waveform displayed can show both amplitude variations and timing variations. The combination of these “closes”...
  • Page 70: Eye Pattern Rise Time

    General Operation Eye Pattern Rise Time Rise times of the waveform can be calculated by measuring the 20% to 80% rise time points with the time cursors. Jitter Meter and Eye Pattern Correlation The jitter meter located just above the Eye pattern display is intended to display the maximum value of jitter over time.
  • Page 71: Eye Pattern Cursor Selections

    General Operation Eye Pattern Cursor Selections Cursors are available for precise measurement of waveform voltage and waveform time. Press the CURS button on the front panel to enable the cursors for the selected pane. The Time Cursor indication is in the lower-right portion of the screen, and the amplitude cursor indication is in the lower- left of the screen as shown in Figure 3-19.
  • Page 72: Eye Pattern Pane Menu Selections

    General Operation Once the cursors are no longer necessary, press and hold the CURS button to return to the Cursor menu and disable the cursor selection submenus. The check mark indicates the cursor is enabled, and no check marks indicate the cursor is disabled. To exit the cursor function while leaving the cursors active, just select another mode in the pane (e.g., Line Select, Variable Gain, etc.).
  • Page 73: Trigger Mode

    Eye Pattern Setup menu see Section 4. Utilizing the EYE and Jitter Displays (TVM-VTM-JEM, TVM9100PKG-EJ, and TVM9140PKG-EJ) The TVM-VTM-JEM is an Eye Pattern Option with an advanced Jitter and signal auto measure feature. The installation of this option changes the back panel.
  • Page 74: Table 3-15. Description Of Tvm-Vtm-Jem Option Back Panel Connectors

    General Operation Figure 3-20. TVM-VTM-JEM Option Back Panel Connectors Table 3-15. Description of TVM-VTM-JEM Option Back Panel Connectors Label Description A (IN) Female BNC HD-SDI or SD-SDI input connector B (IN) Female BNC HD-SDI or SD-SDI input connector A (OUT) Female BNC looping HD-SDI or SD-SDI output connector B (OUT) Female BNC looping HD-SDI or SD-SDI output connector...
  • Page 75 General Operation To access the Eye Pattern display, press the EYE function button on the front panel. The Eye Pattern display appears in the selected pane, as shown in Figure 3-21 and described in Table 3-16. • TVM-40 Select another pane (a pane that does not contain the Eye pattern display), and press the EYE button again.
  • Page 76: Table 3-16. Description Of Eye Pattern Display Diagram

    General Operation Figure 3-21. Eye Pattern Display Diagram Table 3-16. Description of Eye Pattern Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Amplitude cursor readout Displays the amplitude cursor as AMP and the number in Input Displays user-configurable source IDs for input and routers Standard Line rate/Frame rate •...
  • Page 77: Table 3-17. Description Of Jitter Waveform Display Diagram

    General Operation Table 3-16. Description of Eye Pattern Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Jitter Display Bar Displays the Jitter display. Jitter display changes according to the EYE PATTERN > JITTER DISPLAY TYPE menu in the Global Setup menu Jitter Value Displays a numeric value for the jitter on the signal Figure 3-22.
  • Page 78: Table 3-18. Description Of Frequency Waveform Display Diagram

    General Operation Figure 3-23. Frequency Waveform Display Diagram Table 3-18. Description of Frequency Waveform Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Jitter p-p Value Display a numeric value for the jitter on the signal Input Displays user-configurable source IDs for input and routers Standard Line rate/Frame rate High Pass Filter...
  • Page 79 General Operation Figure 3-24 to Figure 3-26 displays the Eye pattern graticules. Figure 3-24. Eye Pattern Graticule Figure 3-25. Eye Pattern Graticule at Zoom 0V Figure 3-26. Eye Pattern Graticule at Zoom 800 mV TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright ©...
  • Page 80: Eye Pattern Measurement Parameters/Considerations

    General Operation Eye Pattern Measurement Parameters/Considerations. The display will show rise time, fall time, and amplitude. Rise and fall times are displayed in ps for HD and ns for SD. Amplitude is displayed in mV. The EYE measurement parameters are the most accurate with clean symmetrical data signals.
  • Page 81: Eye Pattern Cursor Selections

    General Operation Table 3-19. Horizontal Magnification Conditions Horizontal Mag Format Displayed Number of Eyes Displayed x1 (1 ns or 250 ps) SD/HD 3 eye displayed 10 eyes displayed 20 eyes displayed x5 (0.20 ns or 50 ps) SD/HD 3/5 eye displayed 2 eyes displayed 4 eyes displayed x10 (0.10 ns or 25 ps)
  • Page 82 General Operation Figure 3-27. Establishing Cursor Select for Eye Pattern To enable the time and/or amplitude cursors, press and hold the CURS button. Use the NAVIGATION buttons or knobs to select Amplitude or Time. Once selected, press the ENT button to enable it. Once one or both cursors are selected, press the EXIT button to exit the CURS pane menu.
  • Page 83: Eye Pattern And Jitter Pane Menu Selections

    General Operation Eye Pattern and Jitter Pane Menu Selections Pressing and holding the EYE function button or the DISPLAY PANE button in the active Eye Pattern pane or Jitter Waveform pane selects the pane menu. Use the SETUP POSITION knobs or the NAVIGATION buttons to navigate the Pane menu. The Eye Pattern Pane menu is described in Table 3-20 for SD-SDI monitoring, and Table 3-21 for HD-SDI monitoring.
  • Page 84: Jitter High Pass Filter (Hpf) Selection

    General Operation Jitter High Pass Filter (HPF) Selection Because jitter on the data can develop from many sources and have a unique frequency distribution, the bandwidth of the sampling clock recovery circuit will affect the displayed jitter if the frequency of the jitter is within the bandwidth of the clock recovery circuits.
  • Page 85: Utilizing The Vector Display

    General Operation Utilizing the Vector Display Pressing the VECT button accesses the Vector display for the selected pane. A vector display is shown in Figure 3-28 and described in Table 3-23. This illustrates the general location for the various vector fields. Figure 3-28.
  • Page 86 General Operation Table 3-23. Description of Vector Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Line select information Line select is shown as Line and the number with the ODD or EVEN field (odd or even field will only show for certain Video Formats) Vector Standard Displayed as 75%, 100%, or 75% + 100% (HD only);...
  • Page 87 General Operation Figure 3-30. Vector NTSC Zoom Upper Left Figure 3-31. Vector NTSC Zoom Upper Right TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright © 2008, Harris Corporation...
  • Page 88 General Operation Figure 3-32. Vector NTSC Zoom Lower Right Figure 3-33. Vector NTSC Zoom Lower Left TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright © 2008, Harris Corporation...
  • Page 89 General Operation Figure 3-34. Vector PAL Zoom Center Figure 3-35. Vector SD with I/Q TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright © 2008, Harris Corporation...
  • Page 90: Controlling The Vector

    General Operation Figure 3-36. Vector HD 75% + 100% Graticule Controlling the Vector (For Composite analog video input only) A vector display has two individual properties: phase and magnitude. To control the phase of the vector, press the PHASE button and turn the CURVED ARROW knob. The magnitude is controlled by the Variable Gain.
  • Page 91 General Operation Figure 3-37. Establishing the Vector Gain Press the STEP button to step through the available gain selections x1.0, x2.5, x5.0, x15.0. Press VAR to access Vector Variable Gain. Once the Waveform Variable Gain is displayed on the screen, the Vector Variable Gain can be adjusted using the CURVED ARROW KNOB.
  • Page 92: Placing The Vector Display In Line Select Mode

    General Operation Placing the Vector Display in Line Select Mode NOTE: When inputs A and B are selected simultaneously, the Line Select function is not available. Pressing the LINE button enables the selected pane to monitor a single line of a video signal. This enables Line Select to monitor individual areas of the entire image.
  • Page 93: Vector Pane Menu Selections

    General Operation Figure 3-39. Establishing Cursor Select To enable the Phase cursors, press and hold the CURS button. Once the PHASE pop-up menu appears on the screen, press the ENT button to enable it. Once the cursor is selected, press the EXIT button to exit the CURS pane menu. When the cursor is selected, the Phase indication appears.
  • Page 94: Standard

    General Operation Table 3-24. Vector Analog Pane Menu Structure Selection Selection Option ANALOG STANDARD 100% POSITION Use H POS and V POS knob. Press KNOB for center. SETUP Press ENT Table 3-25. Vector SD-SDI Pane Menu Structure Selection Selection Option SD STANDARD 100% SCALE SD TO...
  • Page 95: Vector Position (Centering The Vector)

    General Operation Vector Position (Centering the Vector) Centering the vector should be a one-time calibration and can be done in composite format. Centering of the vector can be accomplished by adjusting the Vector V position and Vector H position in the VECTOR SETUP menu. Vector Setup Press the ENT button to access the global Vector setup menu.
  • Page 96 General Operation Figure 3-40. Gamut Display Diagram Table 3-27. Description of Gamut Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Input Displays user-configurable source IDs for input and routers Format Displayed as Composite and RGB; this can be selected in the HD FORMAT or SD FORMAT submenu of the GAMUT Pane menu Standard Displays the Line Rate/Frame Rate [1080i/59.94];...
  • Page 97: Composite Gamut

    General Operation Table 3-27. Description of Gamut Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Line select information Line select is shown as Line and the number with the ODD or EVEN field (when applicable) Luma alarm limit Displays Luma when Composite is selected. This field is blank when RGB is selected Upper luma alarm limit Displayed as Upper = xxx yyl xxx is the Luma upper...
  • Page 98: Rgb Gamut Display

    General Operation Figure 3-41. Composite Gamut Vector Display Graticule Markings Table 3-28. Description of Composite Gamut Indicators Indicator Description Lower Gamut Ring The lower gamut ring indicates the Gamut alarm Peak Lower limit. When the Gamut alarm is enabled and the Peak Lower limit is exceeded, the lower gamut ring turns red.
  • Page 99 General Operation Each R, G, and B pixel is plotted using amplitude and phase. The amplitude is derived from the R, G, B component. The phase is derived from the C information of the digital signal. The pixels can be plotted as a single color or as each component color (see the Gamut Setup menu in Section 4).
  • Page 100: Placing The Gamut Display In Line Select Mode

    General Operation Placing the Gamut Display in Line Select Mode Pressing the LINE button enables the selected pane to monitor a single line of a video signal. This enables Line Select to monitor individual lines of the entire image. To view a line in Line Select mode: 1.
  • Page 101: Gamut Pane Menu Selections

    General Operation Gamut Pane Menu Selections Pressing and holding the GAMUT function button or the selected DISPLAY PANE button in the active gamut pane selects the pane menu. The Gamut Pane menu is described in Table 3-30. Table 3-30. Gamut Menu Structure Selection Selection Option COLOR SPACE...
  • Page 102 General Operation Figure 3-44. Picture Display Diagram Table 3-31. Description of Picture Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Input Displays user-configurable source IDs for input and routers Standard Displays the Line Rate/Frame Rate [1080i/59.94]; select the Standard in the VIDEO FORMAT > VIDEO A thru D CONFIGURE menu Closed Caption Shown as CC1 –...
  • Page 103: Picture Pane Menu Selections

    General Operation Figure 3-45. Aspect Ratio Source Diagram Picture Pane Menu Selections Pressing and holding the PICT function button or the DISPLAY PANE button in the active picture pane selects the pane menu. The Picture Pane menus are described in Table 3-32 to Table 3-34 for picture monitoring.
  • Page 104: Native Mode

    General Operation Table 3-34. Picture HD Menu Selection Selection Option DELAY DELAY POSITION Use the H POS and V POS knobs. Press KNOB for default. GAMUT HIGHLIGHTING PICTURE SETUP Press ENT Native Mode NOTE: The Native mode menu item will only appear when an SD format is detected or selected.
  • Page 105 General Operation • CC3 – Secondary synchronous caption service (608 or 708) • CC4 – Special non-synchronous use captions (608) • 708 – Digital television caption service (HD only) • T1 – First text service • T2 – Second text service •...
  • Page 106: Timing Display

    General Operation Figure 3-46. Teletext Sample Screen Timing Display Pressing the TIMING function button accesses the Timing display for the selected pane. A Timing display diagram is shown in Figure 3-47 and described in Error! Reference source not found.. The diagram illustrates the general location for the various Timing display fields.
  • Page 107 General Operation Table 3-35. Description of Timing Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Selected reference Displays the selected reference as REF: X where X is A, B, C, D, EXT BB, or EXT TRI; the REF is selected in the TIMING pane menu Test Indicates the input that is being measured, against the...
  • Page 108: Things To Remember When Using The Timing Display

    General Operation resolution at 1µ and the minimum timing resolution at 0.037 µs for HD (High Definition) and 0.74 µs for SD (Standard Definition). Things to Remember When Using the Timing Display 1. The Timing Display measures the elapsed time between the vertical syncs of two inputs.
  • Page 109: Alarm Display

    General Operation Reference Selection The reference selection can be selected from the TIMING pane menu. The Reference selections are: • EXT REF – Reflects current setting of External Reference (selected by pressing and holding the EXT button) • INPUT A – Internal Reference fixed on Input A. •...
  • Page 110 General Operation Figure 3-48. Alarm Log Diagram Table 3-37. Description of Alarm Log Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Input Displays the user-configurable source IDs for the input and routers. Display Label Displayed as ALARM LOG Page Information Displayed as PAGE X of Y, where X is the selected page and Y is the total number of pages Paging information Displays ◄...
  • Page 111: Alarm Status Display

    General Operation When an alarm is first registered, it appears on the alarm display and is highlighted in yellow. If the alarm is short term (i.e., two seconds or less), the alarm text is not highlighted after approximately two seconds. If the alarm continues longer than two seconds, the text remains yellow and the alarm duration is incremented.
  • Page 112 General Operation Figure 3-49. Alarm Status Display Diagram Table 3-38. Description of Alarm Status Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Input Displays the user-configurable source IDs for the input and routers. Display Label Displayed as ALARM STATUS Page Information Displayed as PAGE X of Y, where X is the selected page and Y is the total number of pages.
  • Page 113: Alarm Log And Status Pane Menu Selections

    General Operation Use the following NAVIGATION buttons to scroll through the alarm list: Press to page up through the alarm list. Press to page down through the alarm list. Press to select the last page on the list. Press to select the first page on the list. Alarm Log and Status Pane Menu Selections Pressing and holding the ALARM function button in the alarm status pane selects the pane menu.
  • Page 114: Mute Alarms

    General Operation • Audio Alarms • Time Code Alarms • GPI Alarms Mute Alarms Sound occurs when an alarm is activated and SOUND is selected for the alarm in the Alarm Matrix. The Alarm Matrix is accessed in any of the Alarm Setup menus. The mute alarms submenu is used to enable or disable the alarm notification sound.
  • Page 115: Audio Scales

    General Operation • Two two-channel bar graphs (for a total of four channels) with two Lissajous and two Phase bars • Three two-channel bar graphs (for a total of six channels) with three Phase bars or CineSound 5.1 with two Phase bars •...
  • Page 116 General Operation Audio Output Level adjustment is made in the AUDIO SETUP > OUTPUT PREFERENCES menu. The Audio Output Level adjustment default is 0 dB. The phase bars are used to monitor the instantaneous phase relationship between two channels of audio. The “+” marking indicates a phase difference of 0 degrees, and the “-”...
  • Page 117 General Operation Figure 3-50. Two Bar Graph Display with Lissajous Diagram Table 3-40. Description of Two Bar Graph Display with Lissajous Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Input Displays user-configurable source IDs for input and routers Audio Type Displayed as Analog, AES, Embedded, Dolby AES, Dolby Embedded Audio Input Displayed information is option dependent;...
  • Page 118 General Operation Figure 3-51. Four Bar Graph with Lissajous Display Diagram Table 3-41. Description of Four Bar Graph with Lissajous Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Input Displays user-configurable source IDs for input and routers Audio Type Displayed as Analog, AES, Embedded, Dolby AES, Dolby Embedded Audio Input Displayed information is option dependent;...
  • Page 119 General Operation Figure 3-52. Six Bar Graph Diagram Table 3-42. Description of Six Bar Graph Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Input Displays user-configurable source IDs for input and routers Audio Type Displayed as Analog, AES, Embedded, Dolby AES, Dolby Embedded Audio Input Displayed information is option dependent;...
  • Page 120 General Operation Figure 3-53. Eight Bar Graph Display Diagram Table 3-43. Description of Eight Bar Graph Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Input Displays user-configurable source IDs for input and routers Audio Type Displayed as Analog, AES, Embedded, Dolby AES, Dolby Embedded Audio Input Displayed information is option dependent;...
  • Page 121: Cinesound Display

    General Operation CineSound Display This unique audio display provides an intuitive view of 5.1, 6.1, and 7.1 channels of surround sound audio. The default meter movement is from the center outward, but it can be reversed by a selection in the AUDIO SETUP menu. Two additional channels ®...
  • Page 122 General Operation Figure 3-54. CineSound 5.1 Display Diagram Table 3-45. Description of CineSound Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Input Displays user-configurable source IDs for input and routers Audio Type Displayed as Analog, AES, Embedded, Dolby AES, Dolby Embedded Audio Input Displayed information is option dependent;...
  • Page 123: Loudness Display

    General Operation Figure 3-55. CineSound 6.1 Channels Display Figure 3-56. CineSound 7.1 Channels Display Loudness Display The Loudness Audio display diagram is illustrated in Figure 3-57 and described in Table 3-46. For more information on the Loudness feature, see the A -OPT 2, -OPT 3, A -OPT 5, A...
  • Page 124 General Operation Figure 3-57. Loudness Display Diagram (TVM-A3-OPT 3-TL or TVM-A3-OPT 5-TL Table 3-46. Description of Loudness Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Input Displays user-configurable source IDs for input and routers Audio Type Displayed as Analog, AES, or Embedded Monitored Audio Input Displayed information is option dependent;...
  • Page 125: Expanding The Audio Display

    General Operation Expanding the Audio Display Press the ZOOM button to access the audio zoom feature. The range of the zoom is dependent upon the selections made in the ZOOM CENTER and ZOOM RANGE menu. Press and hold ZOOM to access this menu. •...
  • Page 126: V2A Timing Display (Tvm-A3-Opt V2A Only)

    General Operation V2A Timing Display (TVM-A3-OPT V2A only) NOTE: The TVM-A3-OPT V2A option is only available when the TVM-A3-OPT 3TL or TVM-A3- OPT 5TL is purchased. The V2A option must be used with a GEN-STAR or an X75HD/X75SD device containing the Video/Audio Timing test signal. The TVM-A3-OPT V2A option is used to receive a VA2 test signal and analyze the timing between the video and the audio.
  • Page 127: Display

    General Operation Table 3-48. Option Pane Menu Selection Selection Option DISPLAY DOLBY METADATA (only if the Dolby option is installed). VIDEO METADATA TELETEXT EMBEDDED AUDIO DATA SETUP Press ENT Display The display that appears for the selected input is determined by the DISPLAY submenu of the OPTION Pane setup menu.
  • Page 128: Dolby Metadata Display (Option Dependent)

    General Operation Dolby Metadata Display (Option Dependent) Metadata is Dolby specific information found in the input audio stream that is used to configure encoders that will transmit the Dolby Digital (AC-3) information to audio decoders. When the metadata information appears on the display, use the UP and DOWN NAVIGATION buttons to page through the metadata list.
  • Page 129 General Operation Figure 3-58. Dolby Metadata Display Diagram Table 3-49. Description of Dolby Metadata Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Input Displays user-configurable source IDs for input and routers Display Label Shown as Dolby Metadata Page Information Shown as page X of Y where X is the page number and Y is the total number of pages.
  • Page 130: Video Metadata

    General Operation Video Metadata The Video metadata display provides a description and location in text form of specific data embedded in the video signal. A Video Metadata display diagram is shown in Figure 3-59 and described in Table 3-50. The diagram illustrates the general location for the various Video Metadata display fields.
  • Page 131 General Operation The display, shown in Figure 3-59, shows a chart that is split into three columns, which shows the information to be identified. • The DATA COLUMN lists the Video metadata parameter. • The PRESENT column has two states: No data detected (blank box) and Data Detected (indicated as present).
  • Page 132: Xds

    General Operation Table 3-52. Sample Video Index Pane (TVM-VTM-3GB only) Data Location/info PAL PLUS ACTIVE FORMAT DESCRIPTION Table 3-53. Video Payload Identifier and Active Format Descriptor (TVM-VTM-3Gb Only) Data Location/info VIDEO PAYLOAD IDENTIFIER 0X89c9001 LINK STATUS/BIT DEPTH 100% 10 bit SAMPLING STRUCTURE 4:2:2 YCbCr FRAME RATE...
  • Page 133: Teletext

    General Operation Figure 3-60. XDS Pane Teletext NOTE: If the format selected is not a valid format for teletext, NOT VALID DISPLAY FOR INPUT FORMAT appears on the screen. PAL and 625 are the only formats that functions with teletext. Teletext functionality is operational when enabled in the OPTION DISPLAY pane menu.
  • Page 134 General Operation Figure 3-61. CRC Display Diagram Table 3-54. Description of the CRC Display Diagram Field Field Information Nomenclature Identifier Input Displays user-configurable source IDs for input and routers Display Label Displayed as CRC DISPLAY Standard Displayed as the line rate/frame rate [1080i/59.94]; when no signal is present, No Signal appears Reset Information Reset information;...
  • Page 135 General Operation The following information is displayed when the CRC display is ON and an SD format is detected: Display Description Time since Reset 00:00:00 Hr:min:sec, elapsed time since last reset Seconds Value Full field CRC error in seconds Seconds Value Active Picture CRC error in seconds Value...
  • Page 136: Asi (Option Tvm-Vtm-Asi Only)

    General Operation ASI (Option TVM-VTM-ASI only) NOTE: To enable the ASI screen, refer to “Option Display” on page 102. The ASI screen is used to analyze the transport stream that complies with the ATSC or DVB standard. It utilizes text and graphical formats and trending for up to 20 selectable programs simultaneously.
  • Page 137: Dvb Stream Formats

    General Operation Navigate the screen using the left, right, up, and down navigation buttons. Press the LEFT and RIGHT navigation buttons to select the available video programs in the stream. Information related to the programs appears as soon as the program is selected. Press the UP and DOWN navigation buttons or turn the CURVED ARROW knob to scroll through the available tables.
  • Page 138: Bandwidth And Trending Screen

    General Operation • CAT (Conditional Access Table) - The Condition Access Table (CAT) is the pointer the Entitlement Management Message (EMM) associated with the CA system(s) that it uses. • NIT (Network Information Table) – the NIT contains the information for the transmissions of a stream in a network.
  • Page 139 General Operation Table 3-55. ASI Pane Menu Selection Selection Option DATA FORMAT DECIMAL UTC OFFSET -12.00 TO +12.00 HOURS (0.00 is Default) TREND TIME 15 MINUTES 30 MINUTES 45 MINUTES 60 MINUTES TREND SCALE 10 Mb/s TO 150 Mb/s TREND DISPLAY TOTAL FOLLOW PGM SELECT NULL BANDWIDTH...
  • Page 140: Embedded Audio Data

    General Operation Embedded Audio Data When enabled in the OPTION pop-up menu, the Embedded Audio display appears. Each channel is displayed on two pages. The first page is CHANNEL STATUS BIT and the second page is USER BIT. Audio Control Packet data provides the first block of information at the top of the pane.
  • Page 141: Tvm Classic

    General Operation • DATA ANALYZER: Enables the Data Analyzer display, as described on page 119. The menu item is not accessible without the TVM-VTM-AAP or TVM-40 option. • TIMING CUSTOM: Enables the Custom Timing Display, as described on page 127. •...
  • Page 142 General Operation Table 3-56. Description of Simultaneous TVM Classic Display Description Model Number Latest Alarm indication with the date and time the alarm occurred (highlighted in yellow when active( Location of the Lissajous (X, Y) display of the audio input meter or the AUX location in the 5.1 and AUX/LFE in 6.1 CineSound display Icon status indication Date and time of internal clock...
  • Page 143: Data Analyzer Display (Hd-Sdi And Sd-Sdi Only)

    General Operation The TVM has enough memory for 200 alarms per input. When 200 different alarm events have occurred, alarm number 200 is dropped and the most recent alarm is tagged as 1. Use the UP or DOWN NAVIGATION buttons to scroll through the alarm list.
  • Page 144 General Operation “cosited” Y sample) for the first pixel of the group and combined with the second Y sample (Y’, or Y prime) for the second pixel. The Pixel Cursor and the zoomed picture elements are displayed next to the data. The target area within the Pixel Cursor reflects the Pixel Group Display menu selection 2H, 8H, or 2H x 4V.
  • Page 145: Pixel Cursor

    General Operation Table 3-58. Description of Data Mode Display (SD-SDI and HD SDI Only) Indicator Description ELEMENTS Elements that show the component samples for each pixel; There are two elements per pixel sample grouping: C , Y and C DATA Value of C , Y, C , and Y...
  • Page 146: Trigger On Alarm

    General Operation Table 3-59. Data Analyzer Setup Menu Selection Selection Option PIXEL GROUP DISPLAY 8H (Default) 2H x 4V* NAVIGATION MODE NORMAL DATA SEARCH* ALARM SEARCH* DATA SEARCH (See Data Search on page 123 for complete List) CUSTOM DATA SEARCH 000 TO FFF (Hexadecimal values) * SD-SDI and HD-SDI only Trigger on Alarm...
  • Page 147: Data Search (Sd-Sdi And Hd-Sdi Only)

    General Operation • NORMAL: Navigates the data display normally. • DATA SEARCH: (SD-SDI and HD-SDI only) Enables data search mode. When enabled, the values correspond to the data ID selection made in the DATA SEARCH menu are highlighted. Press the ENT button to select the lines containing the selected data ID.
  • Page 148: Custom Data Search

    General Operation AES extended packet, Group 2 AES extended packet, Group 3 AES extended packet, Group 4 METADATA packets Error detection (EDH) Time code 161/101 Closed Caption (EIA-708-B) 161/102 Closed caption (EIA-608 data) 162/101 Program Description DTV 162/102 Data Broadcast (DTV) 162/203 VBI Data Custom...
  • Page 149 General Operation Figure 3-67. Data Analyzer Display with TVM-VTM-3GB (Level A) Figure 3-68. Data Analyzer Display with TVM-VTM-3GB (Level B) TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright © 2008, Harris Corporation...
  • Page 150 General Operation Table 3-60. Data Analyzer Display with TVM-VTM-3GB (Levels A and B) Indicator Description LINE Indicator that shows the line number of the picture along with the Even (E) and/or Odd (O) line selection; line number corresponds to the cursor on the picture WORD Indicates the data word associate with both the Stream 1 and Stream 2 data...
  • Page 151: Timing Custom Display

    General Operation Timing Custom Display Relative timing of the inputs is compliant with SMPTE RP168. Selecting the Timing Custom Display creates a fixed three-pane display with the Timing Display filling the top two horizontal panes. The Timing pane status information appears in the lower-left section of the pane. The Vector or Gamut display is the lower-left pane.
  • Page 152: 3Gb/S Wfm/Vec Mode (With Tvm-Vtm-3Gb Only)

    General Operation Figure 3-71. WFM/VEC Only Display 3Gb/s WFM/VEC Mode (with TVM-VTM-3GB only) NOTE: When in 3Gb/s mode, one input should have a 3 Gb/s input in order to be functional. The TVM-VTM-3GB has two active-looping triple-rate (2.97 Gb/s, 1.485 Gb/s, and 270 Mb/s) inputs and one-triple rate SDI monitor output.
  • Page 153: Using The Tvm-Vtm-3Gb As A Monitor

    General Operation Using the TVM-VTM-3GB as a Monitor The 3Gb/s WFM/VEC mode is the best method to monitor the 3Gb/s video formats and frame rates. Resources from other functions are needed to display 3Gb/s signals so there are restrictions to audio lissajous and the number of vector and waveform panes. When 3Gb/s mode is selected only one input can be displayed at a time.
  • Page 154: Presets

    General Operation Presets Presets are used to store menu configurations and display settings. A total of 15 presets can be stored in the TVM. Press PRESET button 1 to 8 to select a preset from the associated bank of presets. Preset bank A contains presets 1 to 8.
  • Page 155: Name Preset

    General Operation Table 3-62. Preset Setup Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option NAME PRESET 1 TO 8 RENAME SCREEN NAME * PRESET *1 TO *7 RENAME SCREEN CLEAR PRESET 1 TO 8 PRESS ENT CLEAR * PRESET *1 TO *7 PRESS ENT PRESS ENT SETUP...
  • Page 156: Capturing A Display

    General Operation Capturing a Display The TVM is capable of holding frame-captured displays in internal memory. The DISP button is high tally when a capture is performed or recalled. If no frame had been captured in the pane, press the DISP button to capture the screen.
  • Page 157: Freeze And Freeze + Live Mode (Sd-Sdi And Hd-Sdi Only)

    General Operation Freeze and Freeze + Live Mode (SD-SDI and HD-SDI only) Freeze mode contains two selections: Freeze and Freeze + Live. Selecting Freeze mode will separate the frozen display from the live display. When SDI is high tally, data that was captured in the cache is displayed.
  • Page 158 General Operation This page is intentionally blank. TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright © 2008, Harris Corporation...
  • Page 159: Section 4 ♦ Global Setup Menu Functions

    Section 4 ♦ Global Setup Menu Functions Navigating the Setup Menu Press the SETUP button to access the global setup menu. Use the SETUP POSITION knobs or the NAVIGATION buttons to navigate the Global Setup menu. The SETUP POSITION knobs and Navigation buttons are described below: - Press to enter the Setup menu.
  • Page 160: Setup Menu And Alarm Tables

    Global Setup Menu Functions Setup Menu and Alarm Tables The following tables make up the global setup menu. “(Default)” is shown next to each of the default menu selections. The Setup menu items are listed in Table 4-1 with their corresponding Table and Description pages: Table 4-1.
  • Page 161: Video A, B, C, Or D Format

    Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-2. Video Format Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option VIDEO A FORMAT AUTODETECT (Default) 1080i/60 1080i/59.94 1080i/50 1080p/60 (TVM-VTM-3GB only) 1080p/59.94 (TVM-VTM-3GB only) 1080p/50 (TVM-VTM-3GB only) 1080p/30 1080p/29.97 1080p/25 1080p/24 1080p/23.98 1080p/30sF 1080p/29.97sF 1080p/25sF 1080p/24sF 1080p/23.98sF 720p/60 720p/59.94...
  • Page 162 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-2. Video Format Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option VIDEO B FORMAT AUTODETECT (Default) 1080i/60 1080i/59.94 1080i/50 1080p/60 (TVM-VTM-3GB only) 1080p/59.94 (TVM-VTM-3GB only) 1080p/50 (TVM-VTM-3GB only) 1080p/30 1080p/29.97 1080p/25 1080p/24 1080p/23.98 1080p/30sF 1080p/29.97sF 1080p/25sF 1080p/24sF 1080p/23.98sF 720p/60 720p/59.94...
  • Page 163 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-2. Video Format Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option VIDEO C FORMAT AUTODETECT (Default) 1080i/60 1080i/59.94 1080i/50 1080p/60 (TVM-OPT 3GB only) 1080p/59.94 (TVM-OPT 3GB only) 1080p/50 (TVM-OPT 3GB only) 1080p/30 1080p/29.97 1080p/25 1080p/24 1080p/23.98 1080p/30sF 1080p/29.97sF 1080p/25sF 1080p/24sF...
  • Page 164 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-2. Video Format Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option VIDEO D FORMAT AUTODETECT (Default) 1080i/60 1080i/59.94 1080i/50 1080p/60 (TVM-VTM-3GB only) 1080p/59.94 (TVM-VTM-3GB only) 1080p/50 (TVM-VTM-3GB only) 1080p/30 1080p/29.97 1080p/25 1080p/24 1080p/23.98 1080p/30sF 1080p/29.97sF 1080p/25sF 1080p/24sF 1080p/23.98sF 720p/60 720p/59.94...
  • Page 165: Digital Waveform Graticule

    Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-2. Video Format Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option ENABLE DUAL LINK C-D SOURCE ID INPUT A Rename Screen (Rename and select ACCEPT or CANCEL) INPUT B Rename Screen (Rename and select ACCEPT or CANCEL) OPTION C Rename Screen (Rename and select ACCEPT or CANCEL)
  • Page 166: Persistence

    Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-4. Eye Pattern Setup Menu Selection Selection Option PERSISTENCE NORMAL, 1 to 6, & INFINITE (NORMAL is Default) ATTACK LOW (1), 2 to 15 (NORMAL is 9), and MAX (16) (LOW is Default) Table 4-5. Vector Setup Menu Selection Selection Option PAL OVERLAY...
  • Page 167: Markers

    Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-7. Picture Setup Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option OFF (Default) LOWER LEFT PANE UPPER LEFT UPPER RIGHT LOWER LEFT LOWER RIGHT OFF (Default) LOWER RIGHT PANE UPPER LEFT UPPER RIGHT LOWER LEFT LOWER RIGHT OFF (Default) MARKERS CENTER...
  • Page 168: Xds

    Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-7. Picture Setup Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option OFF (Default) LINE 6 – see Table 4-19 on page SIZE SMALL (Default) LARGE TELETEXT PAGE 000 TO 9FF (100 is default) ANAMORPHIC TIME CODE ENABLE LTC/(D)VITC POSITION MIDDLE (Default if ON is selected)
  • Page 169 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-8. Video Alarms, Digital Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option LOSS OF CARRIER DURATION 0 TO 60 Seconds (2 Seconds is Default) LOSS OF OFF (Default) REFERENCE DURATION 0 TO 60 Seconds (2 Seconds is Default) LOSS OF ACTIVE OFF (Default)
  • Page 170 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-8. Video Alarms, Digital Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option THRESHOLD 625 PAL UNITS: 92 TO 109 UNITS (107 UNITS is Default) PAL mV: 643 TO 762 mV (750 mV is Default) SENSITIVITY 1 TO 20 CES (15 CES is Default) DURATION...
  • Page 171 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-8. Video Alarms, Digital Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option THRESHOLD 625 PAL UNITS: -41 TO 0 UNITS (-19 UNITS is Default) PAL mV: -285 TO 0 mV (-142 mV is Default) SENSITIVITY 1 TO 20 CES (2 CES is Default) DURATION...
  • Page 172 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-8. Video Alarms, Digital Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option WSS (WIDE ENABLE OFF (Default) SCREEN SIGNALING) NOT DETECTED DURATION 10 TO 600 SECONDS (240 SEC is Default) XDS NOT ENABLE OFF (Default) DETECTED DURATION 10 TO 600 SECONDS...
  • Page 173 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-8. Video Alarms, Digital Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option THRESHOLD 10 TO 350 mV (286 mV is Default) DURATION 0 TO 60 Seconds (2 Seconds is Default) PICTURE SHIFT ENABLE OFF (Default) THRESHOLD 0 TO 350 mV (2 mV is Default)
  • Page 174 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-9. Video Alarms, Analog Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option LOSS OF VIDEO ENABLE OFF (Default) THRESHOLD NTSC NTSC IRE: 0 TO 50 IRE (40 is Default) • PAL UNITS: THRESHOLD PAL 0 TO 51 UNITS (41 UNITS is Default) •...
  • Page 175 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-9. Video Alarms, Analog Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option THRESHOLD NTSC NTSC IRE: 50 TO 140 IRE (105 is Default) • PAL UNITS: THRESHOLD PAL 51 TO 143 UNITS (107 UNITS is Default) •...
  • Page 176 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-9. Video Alarms, Analog Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option XDS NOT DETCTED ENABLE OFF (Default) – ANL DURATION 0 TO 600 SECONDS (240 Seconds is Default) XDS NOT ENABLE OFF (Default) UPDATING – ANL DURATION 0 TO 600 SECONDS (240 Seconds is Default)
  • Page 177 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-9. Video Alarms, Analog Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option THRESHOLD NTSC NTSC IRE: 42 TO 50 IRE (45 is Default) • PAL UNITS: THRESHOLD PAL 46 TO 51 UNITS (46 UNITS is Default) •...
  • Page 178 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-9. Video Alarms, Analog Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option WIDTH PAL PAL µ SECONDS: 8 TO 16 µ SECONDS (12 is Default) WINDOW 0.1 TO 0.5 µ SECONDS (0.1 is Default) DURATION 0 TO 60 SECONDS (2 Seconds Default) V BLANKING...
  • Page 179 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-10. Time Code Alarms Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option ALARM REPORTING MATRIX SCREEN SETUP LTC LOSS OF TIME ENABLE OFF (Default) CODE DURATION 0 TO 600 SECONDS (240 Seconds is Default) LTC TIME CODE ENABLE OFF (Default) LEVEL...
  • Page 180 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-10. Time Code Alarms Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option DURATION 0 TO 600 SECONDS (240 Seconds is Default) Table 4-11. TS Alarms Menu (TVM-VTM ASI) Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option ALARM REPORTING MATRIX SCREEN SETUP LOSS OF SIGNAL...
  • Page 181 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-11. TS Alarms Menu (TVM-VTM ASI) Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option ETR 290 2 TRANSPORT ENABLE PRIORITY ERROR DURATION 0 TO 60 SECONDS (2 Seconds is Default) CRC ERROR (ATSC) DURATION 0 TO 60 SECONDS (2 Seconds is Default) CRC ERROR (DVB) DURATION...
  • Page 182 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-11. TS Alarms Menu (TVM-VTM ASI) Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option ETR 290 3rd NIT ACTUAL ERROR ENABLE PRIORITY (DVB only) SHORT RANGE 10 to 100 ms (25 ms is Default) RANGE 1000 ms TO 50000 ms (10000 ms is Default) NIT OTHER ERROR ENABLE...
  • Page 183 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-11. TS Alarms Menu (TVM-VTM ASI) Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option REPETITION MGT ENABLE ERROR (ATSC) MGT RANGE 50 ms TO 2000 ms (150 ms is Default) STT ENABLE STT REPETITION 250 ms TO 60000 ms (1000 ms is Default) RRT ENABLE RRT REPETITION...
  • Page 184 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-12. Monitor Out/Generator A-B Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option 720p/50 625/50 525/59.94 (Default) AUDIO OUTPUT -18 dBFS (default) LEVEL OR -20 dBFS ENABLE GROUP 1-2 ENABLE GROUP 3-4 □ Pas s □ Fail □...
  • Page 185 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-14. Display Setup Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option CURSOR 25% TO 200% INTENSITY XGA FREEZE FREEZE FROM HH:MM:SS CLOCK ENABLE OFF (Default) FREEZE ON ALARM FIRST ALARM MANUAL RETURN TO LIVE (Default) FIRST ALARM AUTO RETURN TO LIVE MONITOR...
  • Page 186 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-16. Communications Setup Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option RCU PORT TERMINATION OFF (Default) BAUD RATE 19200 Baud 38400 Baud (Default) 57600 Baud 115200 Baud IP CONFIGURATION ETHERNET CONFIG SCREEN GPI INPUT INPUT 1 SELECT A FUNCTION ON AIR A...
  • Page 187 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-16. Communications Setup Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option GPI OUTPUT GPO OUT 1 NORMALLY OPEN FUNCTION POLARITY NORMALLY CLOSED GPI OUT 2 NORMALLY OPEN POLARITY NORMALLY CLOSED GPI OUT 1 SETUP FOLLOW INPUT A FOLLOW INPUT B FOLLOW INPUT C FOLLOW INPUT D...
  • Page 188 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-16. Communications Setup Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option • ROUTER PORT INPUT SELECTION A TO B (A is the Default) for 2 inputs • A TO D (A is Default) for 4 inputs CONFIGURATION DISABLED (Default) ENABLE ROUTER...
  • Page 189 Global Setup Menu Functions Table 4-17. System Setup Menu Selection Selection Option Selection Option Selection Option AURAL ALERT ON (Default) CONTROL BRIGHTNESS MIN, 2 TO 9, MAX (3 is ILLUMINATION the Default) CONTRAST MIN, 2 TO 9, MAX (3 is the Default) AUTO OFF OFF/ON...
  • Page 190 Global Setup Menu Functions Video Format Menu The Video Format menu items are described below. Video A, B, C, or D Format The Video “A, B, C, D” Configure menu is used to automatically or manually select the video format reference standard for the selected input. The format selection determines the unit of measure and the critical amplitude limits for the input.
  • Page 191 Global Setup Menu Functions In addition to Dual link features described above, TVM-VTM-3GB also supports 12 bit and 1080P 50/59.94/60 formats. Source ID The Source ID is the ID of the signal for the selected input. The default Source ID is the input selection (Input A to Option D), but the text can be changed by using the Rename Screen, as shown in Figure 4-1.
  • Page 192 Global Setup Menu Functions • Slow = Hum still viewed in the signal. • Fast = Fully restores the signal. Waveform Intensity The Waveform Intensity is used to raise or lower the brightness of the displayed waveform. Waveform Contrast Waveform Contrast is used to adjust the overall difference between the lightest and darkest colors of the waveform.
  • Page 193 Global Setup Menu Functions Eye Intensity The Eye Intensity submenu is used to raise or lower the brightness of the displayed Eye Pattern. The range of intensity is 25% to 200%. Eye Contrast The Eye Contrast submenu is used to adjust the overall difference between the lightest and darkest colors of the Eye Pattern.
  • Page 194 Global Setup Menu Functions Vector Intensity The Vector Intensity is used to raise or lower the brightness of the displayed vector. The range of intensity is 25% to 200%. Normal (100%) is the default. Vector Contrast Vector Contrast is used to adjust the overall difference between the lightest and darkest colors of the vector.
  • Page 195 Global Setup Menu Functions Data Error Persistence Data Error Persistence is used to determine how long a point of data in the Composite Gamut remains on the display. The ranges of Persistence are NORMAL, 1 TO 6, and INFINITE. Picture Setup Menu The Picture Setup menu items are described below.
  • Page 196 Global Setup Menu Functions CC4, T1 to T4, and 708 (which is HD only) Service 1 to 7. For more information on Closed Captioning, see Closed Caption on page 80. Located in the upper-left corner of the picture display is the Extended Data Services (XDS) display when it is enabled in the PICTURE SETUP menu.
  • Page 197 Global Setup Menu Functions *NOTE: Not available for Line 6 selection. (Closed Caption) Size The SIZE menu is used to select the size of the text of the closed caption display. The selections are large (covers more of the displayed video signal) or small (covers less of the displayed video signal).
  • Page 198: (Picture) Color

    Global Setup Menu Functions between the lightest and darkest colors) to 200% (for the most amount of difference between the lightest and darkest colors). The default picture contrast is 100%. (Picture) Color Picture Color is used to change the picture to color or monochromatic (black and white).
  • Page 199: Display Setup

    Global Setup Menu Functions • Colorbar with Motion: Select Colorbar with Motion to display a standard colorbar display with a bouncing square that moves around the display. The video output signals that are selectable in the Video Format menu are: •...
  • Page 200: Graticule Intensity

    Global Setup Menu Functions color can be used for multiple functions, each function can use one color. Black cells in the Display Color Screen indicate color selections that cannot be made for specific functions. NOTE: The background color is selectable. There is a 50% reduction in the luminance level of the background relative to the same color of other attributes (e.g.
  • Page 201: Lcd Backlight

    Global Setup Menu Functions Output Level The Output Level submenu is used to determine the monitor output level. The default monitor output level is 1V p-p. The other output level selection is 0.7V p-p. Monochrome Display The Monochrome Display submenu is used to change between a color and monochrome display.
  • Page 202: Gpi Input Function And Gpi Alarm Names

    Global Setup Menu Functions • Fully compliant with IEEE 802.3 Ethernet standard The interface can accept a static IP address, or it can obtain an IP address dynamically from a DHCP server. The IP Address, Subnet Mask, Gateway Address, DHCP enable, and Port are programmable from the Unit Ethernet Setup menu system.
  • Page 203: Gpi Output Function

    Global Setup Menu Functions 4. Use the NAVIGATION buttons to move the cursor to GPI ALARM NAMES. 5. Press the ENT button. 6. Use the NAVIGATION buttons to select the desired input (INPUT 1 to INPUT 9). 7. Press the ENT button. The GPI Rename Screen, shown in Figure 4-4, appears. Figure 4-4.
  • Page 204: Gpi Alarm Reporting Setup

    Global Setup Menu Functions GPI Alarm Reporting Setup The GPI Alarm Reporting Setup menu accesses the GPI Alarm Reporting Matrix. In the GPI Alarm Reporting Matrix select what functions each GPI Alarm (GPI Alarm 1 through 9) will trigger when an alarm is activated. Each alarm can be selected to trigger one or more of the following: LOG, SOUND, SNMP TRAP, GPI OUT 1, GPI OUT 2, FREEZE, DATA CAPTURE, and STREAMER.
  • Page 205 Global Setup Menu Functions until the password is entered. The Presets are locked and unlocked using the Password screen, shown in Figure 4-5. NOTE: The default password is 0-0-0. Figure 4-5. Panel and Preset Lock/Unlock Screen. To lock or unlock the presets or front panel: NOTE: Once Front Panel is selected to be locked out, the front panel is locked.
  • Page 206 Global Setup Menu Functions 14. Press the ENT button to toggle between Lock and Unlock on the highlighted Preset Number selection. 15. Repeat the previous two steps for any other selection needed to be made. 16. After the settings are complete, press the EXIT button to exit the menu. (If the front panel was locked in the steps above) The front panel is locked once EXIT is pressed.
  • Page 207: Clock Display

    Global Setup Menu Functions 10. Use the UP and DOWN NAVIGATION buttons to move the cursor to select 0-9 (third digit in the current password). When the correct password is entered, LOCKED changes to UNLOCK will appear. 11. Use the RIGHT and LEFT NAVIGATION buttons to move the cursor to UNLOCK.
  • Page 208: Time Code Input

    Global Setup Menu Functions Time Code Input The Time Code Input is used to determine the Time Code Source for each format. The TVM can read LTC (Longitudinal Time Code) and DVITC (Digital Vertical Interval Time Code) based on the format selected. The Time Code Input menu has three submenus: •...
  • Page 209: Diagnostics (System Fault Log)

    Global Setup Menu Functions Auto Off Time When Auto Off is enabled, the Auto Off Time is used to turn off the front panel LEDs when no buttons are pressed after 15 SECONDS, 30 SECONDS, 45 SECONDS, 1 TO 60 MINUTES. Diagnostics (System Fault Log) The System Fault Log, shown in Figure 4-7, is used to show the faults that occur within the system.
  • Page 210: Flash Update From Usb

    Global Setup Menu Functions copy the file to the USB drive. Press CANCEL to not copy the file. Pressing the EXIT button also will not transfer the file to the USB drive. The right column shows what is stored in the USB memory device. The stored Presets and XGA captures on the USB drive are shown in this column.
  • Page 211 Global Setup Menu Functions Figure 4-9. About Screen TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright © 2008, Harris Corporation...
  • Page 212 Global Setup Menu Functions This page is intentionally blank. TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright © 2008, Harris Corporation...
  • Page 213 Section 5 ♦ Alarm Descriptions Setting Alarms Most alarms monitor all lines of the video signal. The VITS alarm is an exception. The VITS alarm is used to monitor activity or the lack of activity on a particular line. The GAMUT alarm is more typical.
  • Page 214 Alarm Descriptions Alarm Message Contents and Limitations Figure 5-1. Sample Alarm Message (TVM Classic Mode Display) Table 5-1. Description of Sample Alarm Message Description Index number, from 1-200 Error type, which describes the alarm Date and time (the internal clock setting in month/day/year and hour:minute:second) Time code, which is from the LTC/CLOCK, VITC, or D-VITC (shown in day:hour:minute:second:frame) Duration, which is the length of time that the error occurred (shown in hour:minute:second)
  • Page 215 Alarm Descriptions Video Alarms Digital Descriptions The Video Alarms Digital menu contents are listed below. Format Change The Format Change alarm is used to indicate that the video format has been changed. Payload Identifier Mismatch (TVM-VTM-3GB only) The Payload Identifier Mismatch alarm is used to indicate that the payload received from the input stream does not match the detected input format such as HD/SD and frame rate.
  • Page 216 Alarm Descriptions CRC HD The CRC HD alarm occurs when the internally calculated CRC value is different from the received CRC value (High definition only). CRC Alarms The following information is displayed when the CRC display is ON and an SD format is detected: Display Description...
  • Page 217 Alarm Descriptions • ANC DATA PLACEMENT ERROR (anc placement) • ABSENCE OF SERIAL VIDEO INPUT (no video) Press the ENT button to reset the CRC elapsed time to zero and clear the EDH errors. Table 5-2. CRC Alarm Error Types Error Type Description CRC ERRORED SECONDS...
  • Page 218 Alarm Descriptions Letterbox – SD Letterbox is the top and bottom border surrounding the active video. The top border is defined as having video below the threshold on the set line and having video above on the following line. The bottom border is defined as having video above the threshold on the previous line and video below the threshold on the set line.
  • Page 219 Alarm Descriptions CC Not Updating – 708 The Closed Caption Not Updating 708 alarm is activated when data received for the active window through a DTVCC C0, G0, C1, G1 Code Set Mapping command is unchanging for a period in excess of the duration setting. Teletext Not Detected –...
  • Page 220 Alarm Descriptions Video Alarms Analog Descriptions The Video Alarms Analog menu contents are listed below. Loss of Signal The Loss of Signal alarm occurs when no sync signal is detected for a period in excess of the duration setting. Loss of Reference The Loss of reference alarm occurs when no sync signal is detected in the external reference for a period in excess of the duration setting.
  • Page 221 Alarm Descriptions H (Horizontal) Sync Lower The H Sync Lower alarm occurs when the horizontal sync pulse falls outside the lower limit for a period in excess of the duration setting. Burst Upper The Burst Upper alarm occurs when the peak absolute value of burst falls outside the upper limit for a period in excess of the duration setting.
  • Page 222 Alarm Descriptions VITS The VITS alarm occurs when the selected lines become active or inactive as set by the amplitude threshold for a period in excess of the duration setting. One or more lines can be monitored, and they do not have to be successive. For example, line 17/E can be monitored for activity over 50 IRE while line 20/O is monitored for inactivity under 50 IRE.
  • Page 223 Alarm Descriptions LTC Loss of Time Code The Loss of Time Code alarm occurs when the peak-to-peak level of the LTC input signal falls below an adjustable limit for a period in excess of the duration setting. LTC Time Code Level The Time Code Level alarm occurs when the peak-to-peak level of the LTC input signal falls outside the user defined range limits for a period in excess of the duration setting.
  • Page 224 Alarm Descriptions TS Alarms Descriptions (TVM-VTM-ASI) The TS Alarms menu contents are listed below. Alarm Reporting Setup The TS Alarm Reporting Setup menu is used to accesses the Alarm Reporting Matrix. In the Alarm Reporting Matrix select what functions each Alarm will trigger when an alarm is activated.
  • Page 225 Alarm Descriptions PID Error A Packet Identifier (PID) error occurs when a data stream for each PID is not identified for a period in excess of the range setting. The error might occur where transport streams are multiplexed, or demultiplexed and remultiplexed. ETR 290 2 Priority The ETR 290 2...
  • Page 226 Alarm Descriptions present, the receiver is not able to receive management messages, and a CAT Error alarm activates. ETR 290 3 Priority The ETR 290 3 Priority menu contains the NIT Actual Error, NIT Other Error, SDT Actual Error, SDT Other Error, EIT Actual Error. EIT Other Error, EIT PF Error, Unreferenced PID Error, Repetition Error, Base PID Error, Buffer Errors, Empty Buffer Error, and Data Delay Error alarms.
  • Page 227 Alarm Descriptions • The EIT table contains an invalid ID. The EIT table IDs must contain a valid ID. The IDs 0x4E, 0x6F, or 0x72 must be present at PID 0x0012 EIT Other Error (DVB only) The EIT Other Error alarm activates when Event Information Table sections (S0 or S1) with the same number appear slower than the repetition rate.
  • Page 228 Alarm Descriptions STT Repetition The STT table activates the Repetition Error alarm when the appearance of the System Time Table falls below the minimum repetition rate. RRT Repetition The RRT table activates the Repetition Error alarm when the appearance of the Rating Region Table falls below the minimum repetition rate.
  • Page 229 Section 6 ♦ External Control Using the Keyboard Commands Table 6-1 lists the keyboard commands used for remote operation of a single TVM or multiple TVM units with a USB keyboard connected. This table continues on the next page. Table 6-1. Keyboard Commands Function Keystroke Description...
  • Page 230 External Control Table 6-1. Keyboard Commands Function Keystroke Description Selects Preset 1 Selects Preset 2 Selects Preset 3 Selects Preset 4 Selects Preset 5 Selects Preset 6 Selects Preset 7 Selects Preset 8 ▲ ↑ Up Navigation button ► → Right Navigation button ▼...
  • Page 231 External Control • Initiate, display, and transfer frame captures from the TVM/VTM SpyderWeb II uses a network connection for monitoring and control of up to 30 TVM/TVM series units. The SpyderWeb II program runs cooperatively with other ® Windows programs. It runs “in the background” of a PC using a Windows operating system, allowing use of the PC for other tasks.
  • Page 232 External Control Tab/Tab Details Clicking the Tab at the top of the screen will link to the appropriate tab page, as shown in the example in Figure 6-1. Table 6-2 describes the fields shown in the Tab/Tab Details section. Table 6-2. Tab/Tab Details Description Field Description WEB FUNCTION TABS...
  • Page 233 External Control Table 6-2. Tab/Tab Details Description Field Description SAVE Button The SAVE button is used to save the changed parameter values for the selected field. The SAVE button will not be enabled for any field until the field parameter changes. Once the SAVE button is enabled, click the SAVE button to save the changes.
  • Page 234 MIB objects between an Agent and a Network Management System is the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP). An object in the Videotek TVM Series MIB represents each TVM Series parameter and status, and each object can be referred to by a numeric designation called an Object ID (OID).
  • Page 235 Section 7 ♦ Troubleshooting WARNING: These instructions are for use by qualified personnel only. To reduce the risk of electric shock, do not perform this installation or any servicing unless you are qualified to do so. Refer all servicing to qualified service personnel. NOTE: When power is applied to the unit, the display shows the startup screen for about 45 seconds.
  • Page 236 Troubleshooting 2. Once the message appears, the Warm start is complete. Cold Start after VFlash After a VFlash update is performed, cycle the power and perform a cold start to continue. To perform a Cold Start after a VFlash update: 1.
  • Page 237 Troubleshooting Table 7-1. TVM Series: Problems, Causes, and Solutions Problem/Symptom Possible Cause Solution or Explanation Picture width not correct The aspect ratio is not set Change aspect ratio in the setup correctly. menu. Input switches by itself The router control is on. Turn off router control in the setup menu.
  • Page 238 Troubleshooting This page is intentionally blank. TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright © 2008, Harris Corporation...
  • Page 239 Appendix A ♦ Specifications Specifications are subject to change without notice. Video Input Specifications: 3G/HD-SDI/SD-SDI Option Item Specification Digital inputs Two (2) dual standards inputs accepting Standard definition, SMPTE 259 MC formats or High definition SMPTE 292M, 372M, 424M, 425M-AB formats including: 525/59.94, 625/50, 1080i/60, 1080i/59.94, 1080i/50, 1080p/60, 1080p/59.94, 1080p/50, 1080p/30, 1080p/29.97, 1080p/25, 1080p/24, 1080p/23.98, 1080/30sF, 1080/29.97sF, 1080/25sF, 1080/24sF, 1080/23.98sF, 720p/60,...
  • Page 240 Specifications Video Input Specifications: HD-SDI/SD-SDI Option Item Specification Monitor output data rate 270 Mb/s and 1.485 Gb/s Monitor output connector Monitor output level 800 mV, nominal Video Input Specifications: SD-SDI Option Item Specification Digital inputs Two (2) SMPTE 259-MC inputs, auto detect 525/59.94 and 625/50 Data rate 270 Mb/s auto detect Connectors...
  • Page 241 Specifications EYE and Jitter/Frequency Patterns Item Specification - HD = 20 eyes displayed • x5 - SD/HD = 3/5 eye displayed - SD = 2 eyes displayed - HD = 4 eyes displayed • x10 - SD/HD = 3/10 eye displayed - SD = 1 eye displayed - HD = 2 eyes displayed EYE amplitude display accuracy...
  • Page 242 Specifications DVI-I Output Specifications Item Specification Digital levels Per DDWG DVI rev 1 R, G, B levels Selectable 0.7 or 1V p-p, nominal Pixel rate 65 Mp/s Analog R,G,B impedance 75Ω Horizontal sync Negative TTL pulse @ 48,363 Hz ± 1% Vertical sync Negative TTL pulse @ 60.004 Hz ±...
  • Page 243 Specifications Control Specifications Item Specification Nine total with four input and five preset recall selections or individually user configured as alarm input Two alarms, user configured Connector 26-pin HD (high density) D-sub, female Input impedance 10 kΩ returned to +5 VDC Alarm output Relay closure Maximum relay current...
  • Page 244 Specifications SDI Freeze Item Specification • Waveform Freeze-capable displays • Vector • Picture • Data Display differentiation method Frozen waveform and vector can be set to a different color than live. All inputs (Inputs A, B, C, D) can each have a different color, and the frozen waveform and vector can be a third color.
  • Page 245 Specifications CRC Error Display Item Specification • F2 AP CRC Value – displays the most recent active picture CRC for field 2 (SD only) • Format Errors • Time since last reset • Embedded audio presence • Other ancillary data presence •...
  • Page 246: Power Requirements

    Specifications Magnification Item Specification Waveform gain Variable from x0.50 to x15.00 Vector gain Variable: x0.50 to x10.00 in .01 steps Ethernet Item Specification Standard 10/100 Base-T conforms to IEEE802.3 Connector RJ-45 Performance metric Transfer a captured frame to a PC in ≤ 30 seconds, dedicated LAN Number of simultaneous connections External Routing Control...
  • Page 247: Standard Accessories

    Specifications Standard Accessories Item Specification • TVM Installation and Operation Handbook Standard accessories • Breakout connector for GPI/TALLY/LTC/CLOCK • One rack mounting kit • One power cord • DVI to VGA adapter TVM Options Item Specification TVM-VTM-ACV-2 Two (2) looping analog composite video inputs for NTSC or PAL format TVM-VTM-SDI-S Two (2) looping inputs for SMPTE 259M-C (SD-SDI) with auto detect...
  • Page 248 Specifications TVM Options Item Specification TVM-VTM-AAP Software Feature Upgrade. Advanced Analysis Package that adds data analyzer functions in quadrant or full-screen views to the TVM-10. (Included in TVM-40.) ® TVM-A3-OPT 2 Advanced Audio Analysis Option. Bargraphs and CineSound . View up to 8 audio channels.
  • Page 249 Specifications TVM Options Item Specification BLK-1 Blank panel for DRC-2A DAT-3 Half-rack tray for DRC-2A TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright © 2008, Harris Corporation...
  • Page 250 Appendix B ♦ Pinouts Figure B-1. ANALOG AUDIO IN/OUT 37-pin, Male, D-sub Connector For Audio Options Table B-1. Pinouts for ANALOG AUDIO IN/OUT Connector and Audio Breakout Board Pinout Signal Pinout Signal Analog input 1 – Analog input 1 + Analog input 2 –...
  • Page 251 Pinouts Figure B-2. DVI-I Out Connector Table B-2. Pinouts for DVI-I Out Connector Pinout Signal Pinout Signal Pinout Signal T.M.D.S. Data 2- T.M.D.S. Data 1- T.M.D.S. Data 0- T.M.D.S. Data 2+ T.M.D.S. Data 1+ T.M.D.S. Data 0+ T.M.D.S. Data 2/4 T.M.D.S.
  • Page 252 Pinouts Figure B-3. LTC/GPI 26-pin, Female, D-sub Connector Figure B-4. LTC/GPI Breakout Board Table B-3. Pinouts for LTC/GPI Connector and LTC/GPI Breakout Board Pinout Signal Pinout Signal Return for GPI #1 GPI input #4 (Select input D) GPI output #2 GPI input #3 (Select input C) Return for GPI #2 GPI input #2 (Select input B)
  • Page 253 Pinouts Figure B-5. Remote RJ-11 Control Connector Table B-4. Remote RJ-11 Control Connector Pinouts Pinout Signal RCU1000 OPEN Open RX - Received by TVM Series Transmit from RCU RX + Received by TVM Series Transmit from RCU TX - Transmit from TVM Series Received by RCU TX + Transmit from TVM Series...
  • Page 254 Pinouts Figure B-7. Ethernet RJ-45 Connector Table B-6. Ethernet RJ-45 Connector Pinouts Pinout Signal Pinout Signal N.C. N.C. N.C. N.C. Figure B-8. USB Connector Table B-7. USB Connector Pinouts Pinout Signal Data - Data + TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright ©...
  • Page 255 Appendix C ♦ Open Source Software Copyright Information Copyright information for certain Open Source software products is provided below. Source code for all Open Source software used in the development of this product is available upon request (contact the Harris Customer Service Department). See “Service and Support”...
  • Page 256 Open Source Software Copyright Information Networks Associates Technology, Inc. Copyright Notice (BSD) Copyright © 2001-2003, Networks Associates Technology, Inc. All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: •...
  • Page 257: Cambridge Broadband Ltd. Copyright Notice (Bsd)

    Open Source Software Copyright Information Cambridge Broadband Ltd. Copyright Notice (BSD) Portions of this code are copyright © 2001-2003, Cambridge Broadband Ltd. All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: •...
  • Page 258: Sun Microsystems, Inc. Copyright Notice (Bsd)

    Open Source Software Copyright Information Sun Microsystems, Inc. Copyright Notice (BSD) Copyright © 2003 Sun Microsystems, Inc., 4150 Network Circle, Santa Clara, California 95054, U.S.A. All rights reserved. Use is subject to license terms below. This distribution may include materials developed by third parties. Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun logo and Solaris are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc.
  • Page 259: Sparta, Inc. Copyright Notice (Bsd)

    Open Source Software Copyright Information Sparta, Inc. Copyright Notice (BSD) Copyright © 2003-2008, Sparta, Inc. All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: • Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
  • Page 260: Cisco/Buptnic Copyright Notice (Bsd)

    Open Source Software Copyright Information Cisco/BUPTNIC Copyright Notice (BSD) Copyright © 2004, Cisco, Inc and Information Network Center of Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications. All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: •...
  • Page 261: Fabasoft R&D Software Gmbh & Co. Kg Copyright Notice (Bsd)

    Open Source Software Copyright Information Fabasoft R&D Software GmbH & Co. KG Copyright Notice (BSD) Copyright © Fabasoft R&D Software GmbH & Co. KG, 2003 oss@fabasoft.com. Author: Bernhard Penz Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: •...
  • Page 262: The Gnu V2 License

    Open Source Software Copyright Information The GNU v2 License GNU General Public License Version 2, June 1991 Copyright © 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
  • Page 263: Terms And Conditions For Copying, Distribution And Modification

    Open Source Software Copyright Information GNU General Public License Terms and Conditions for Copying, Distribution and Modification 0. This License applies to any program or other work which contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed under the terms of this General Public License.
  • Page 264 Open Source Software Copyright Information the distribution of the whole must be on the terms of this License, whose permissions for other licensees extend to the entire whole, and thus to each and every part regardless of who wrote it. Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights or contest your rights to work written entirely by you;...
  • Page 265 Open Source Software Copyright Information works. These actions are prohibited by law if you do not accept this License. Therefore, by modifying or distributing the Program (or any work based on the Program), you indicate your acceptance of this License to do so, and all its terms and conditions for copying, distributing or modifying the Program or works based on it.
  • Page 266: No Warranty

    Open Source Software Copyright Information version number of this License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software Foundation. 10. If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the author to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by the Free Software Foundation, write to the Free Software Foundation;...
  • Page 267: Gnu Lesser Public License

    Open Source Software Copyright Information GNU Lesser Public License GNU Lesser General Public License Version 2.1, February 1999 Copyright © 1991, 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
  • Page 268 Open Source Software Copyright Information Finally, software patents pose a constant threat to the existence of any free program. We wish to make sure that a company cannot effectively restrict the users of a free program by obtaining a restrictive license from a patent holder. Therefore, we insist that any patent license obtained for a version of the library must be consistent with the full freedom of use specified in this license.
  • Page 269: Terms And Conditions For Copying, Distribution And Modification

    Open Source Software Copyright Information GNU Lesser General Public License Terms and Conditions for Copying, Distribution and Modification 0. This License Agreement applies to any software library or other program which contains a notice placed by the copyright holder or other authorized party saying it may be distributed under the terms of this Lesser General Public License (also called “this License”).
  • Page 270 Open Source Software Copyright Information d) If a facility in the modified Library refers to a function or a table of data to be supplied by an application program that uses the facility, other than as an argument passed when the facility is invoked, then you must make a good faith effort to ensure that, in the event an application does not supply such function or table, the facility still operates, and performs whatever part of its purpose remains meaningful.
  • Page 271 Open Source Software Copyright Information satisfies the requirement to distribute the source code, even though third parties are not compelled to copy the source along with the object code. 5. A program that contains no derivative of any portion of the Library, but is designed to work with the Library by being compiled or linked with it, is called a “work that uses the Library.”...
  • Page 272 Open Source Software Copyright Information present on the user’s computer system, rather than copying library functions into the executable, and (2) will operate properly with a modified version of the library, if the user installs one, as long as the modified version is interface- compatible with the version that the work was made with.
  • Page 273 Open Source Software Copyright Information you indicate your acceptance of this License to do so, and all its terms and conditions for copying, distributing or modifying the Library or works based on it. 10. Each time you redistribute the Library (or any work based on the Library), the recipient automatically receives a license from the original licensor to copy, distribute, link with or modify the Library subject to these terms and conditions.
  • Page 274: No Warranty

    Open Source Software Copyright Information license version number, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software Foundation. 14. If you wish to incorporate parts of the Library into other free programs whose distribution conditions are incompatible with these, write to the author to ask for permission.
  • Page 275: Appendix D ♦ Glossary

    Appendix D ♦ Glossary 601 An international standard (ITU-R BT.601) for component digital television. It defines the sampling systems, matrix values, and filter characteristics for digital television. 8 VSB Vestigial sideband modulation with 8 discrete amplitude levels. 16 VSB Vestigial sideband modulation with 16 discrete amplitude levels. Advanced Television Systems Committee (ATSC) The parent organization that developed, tested and described the form and function of the US digital television formats.
  • Page 276 Open Source Software Copyright Information Blanking Processor A circuit which removes sync, burst and blanking from the program video and then replaces it with sync, burst and blanking from the reference input. The process ensures constant sync and burst levels on program video. Booga Good to view in order to see.
  • Page 277 Open Source Software Copyright Information D/A Conversion of digital to analog signals. DA Distribution Amplifier Data Element An item of data as represented before encoding and after decoding. Decoded Stream The decoded reconstruction of a compressed bit stream. Decibel (dB) A logarithmic measure of the ratio between two powers, voltages, currents, sound intensities, etc.
  • Page 278 Open Source Software Copyright Information Elementary Stream (ES) A generic term for one of the coded video, audio or other variable length bit streams which are packetized to form MPEG-2 transport streams. Consists of compressed data from a single source (audio, video, data, etc.). One elementary stream is carried in a sequence of PES packets with one and only one stream ID.
  • Page 279 Open Source Software Copyright Information Frame A single full resolution picture as viewed in either a video or film system. In the case of interlaced video, two consecutive fields provide all of the information of one frame. In non-interlaced systems, one cycle of vertical synchronization produces a frame.
  • Page 280 Open Source Software Copyright Information Key Cut In a key effect, this is the video which designates the portion of background video which is removed. Key Fill In a key effect, this is the video which is used to replace the portion of background video which was removed.
  • Page 281 Open Source Software Copyright Information M/E Mix/Effects System MP@HL Main profile at high level MP@ML Main profile at main level MPEG Refers to standards developed by the ISO/IEC JTC1/SC29 WG11, Moving Picture Experts Group. MPEG-2 Refers to ISO/IEC standards 13818-1 (Systems), 13818-2 (Video), 13818-3 (Audio), and 13818-4 (Compliance).
  • Page 282 Open Source Software Copyright Information PRO Audio A transmitted audio channel for talent cueing via Interrupt Foldback (IFB) to ENG vans and remote applications. Some demodulators support PRO audio monitoring. Program A transport stream combination of a video stream and one or more audio and data streams associated with that video stream.
  • Page 283 Open Source Software Copyright Information Sampling Process by which an analog signal is sampled to convert the analog signal to digital. SAP Secondary Audio Program, used in television broadcast for second language broadcasting, simulcasting, and separate audio programming. Saturation Color intensity SAW Filter Surface Acoustic Wave filter Segment Error Rate (SER) A calculated average of uncorrected transport stream packets vs.
  • Page 284 Open Source Software Copyright Information Transport Stream-ATSC (TS) Consists of the following: (1) Packets: 188 bytes - fixed length with descriptive data, (2) Carries several programs, (3) has a PID which identifies the type of TS packet (video, audio, other), and (4) carries descriptive information about the program.
  • Page 285: Index

    Index About, 186 Analog Audio In/Out, 16 About Screen, 187 B (IN), 50 Accessories, 223 B (OUT), 50 Alarm Digital Audio IN/OUT, 16 Display, 85 Digital Audio Output, 16 Log, 85 DVI Out, 17 Status, 87 ENET, 17 Alarm Settings Display, 87, 118, 190 LTC/GPI, 17 Alarms Option C and D, 16...
  • Page 286 Index Analog Audio In/Out, 16 Specifications, 220 B (IN), 50 Dual Link, 166 B (OUT), 50 Embedded Audio Digital Audio IN/OUT, 16 Display, 116 Digital Audio Output, 16 Encoded Gamut DVI Out, 17 Alarm, 75 ENET, 17 Environmental GPI/TALLY, LTC/CLOCK, 13 Specifications, 222 LTC/GPI, 17 Ethernet...
  • Page 287 Index Controls and Indicators Description, Waveform and Vector Display, 38, 68, 76 Illumination, 24 Vector, 68 Function, 27 Waveform, 38 Function Not Allowed, 27 Linking Panes, 27 Gain Lissajous, 118 Vector, 66 Lockout Gamut Panel, 181, 183 Alarm, 189 Preset, 181, 183 Composite, 73 Display, 71 Port Description, 17...
  • Page 288 Index Display, 77 Video, 7 Gamut, 80 Sweep modes, 36 Menu, 79 System Fault Log, 185 Pinouts Tally Analog Audio IN/OUT Options, 226 Port Description, 17 Ethernet Connector, 230 Teletext GPI/TALLY, LTC/CLOCK Display, 109 Connector, 228 Terms, 23 Router Control Connector, 227, 229, Thumbnail, 171 Time Code Power Requirements...
  • Page 289 Index Unit of Measure, 31 Errors, 45 Video Input Specifications Filter, 42 3Gb/HD-SDI/SD-SDI, 215 Gain, 37 Analog, 216 Graticules, 33 HD-SDI/SD-SDI, 215 Line Select Mode, 38 SD-SDI, 216 Pane Menu, 39 Video Metadata, 106 Parade and Overlay, 42 Video Setup Sweep, 35 NTSC Pedestal, 167 Zoom, 38...
  • Page 290 Index This page is intentionally blank. TVM Series Installation and Operation Handbook Copyright © 2008, Harris Corporation...
  • Page 292 Item Number 061793 Rev. - Printed 11/08...

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