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Author
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Topic: CP65 non-sync surround gain adjustment
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Steve Guttag
We forgot the crackers Gromit!!!
Posts: 12814
From: Annapolis, MD
Registered: Dec 1999
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posted 08-31-2007 12:23 PM
....and then Richard reads...that Scott was referring the SURROUND level in Non-Sync, which has its own trimmer on the Cat 441 card.
Remember, cinema is the only form of surround sound where the surrounds are not balanced equally as the stage channels. That is, we set surrounds to 82dB/side with discrete sources for a combined level of 85dBc with the stage channels referenced to 85dBc as well.
Other forms of surround sound and in particular consumer based surround sound (as well as broadcast) has all channels equally balanced. As such, if a cinema system has a properly calibrated surround system, then the non-cinema sources will need a 3dB boost on each surround channel.
To muck it up yet further...on a CP65, there is a permanent boost put into the mono surround level of 3dB to compensate for well, the Cat 150 decoders that were in use BEFORE the CP65. I've never found that the Cat 150E (what originally came with the CP65) or the Cat 150F (which was in production until the end of the CP65) needed this extra boost that the earlier forms (Cat 150 - Cat150C) needed. Anyway, for this reason, when one tunes a CP65 and since one selects format 04, one must tune their surrounds to 85dBc/side for a total of 88dBc when both are playing...the processor removes this boost for digital.
If it were me, Scott, I would take my pink noise generator (external)...feed it in to left and right to take a reading of the SPL, then invert phase to one channel and set the surrounds. Note, the CP65 is unbalanced so you will need to isolate the channels.
Steve
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John Hawkinson
Film God
Posts: 2273
From: Cambridge, MA, USA
Registered: Feb 2002
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posted 09-04-2007 10:48 PM
Scott asks, "So, how do I invert phase on one channel of an unbalanced signal?"
The obvious way is with a transformer (I don't know if there's some cool audio hack that lets you skip that). The problem here is that even if your source simply allowed you to swap the signal and the ground (with would mean the CP65's ground was tied to the generator's signal and vice-versa), if you're feeding the same source into two channels on the CP65, then you're connecting the CP65's left-channel ground to the CP65's right-channel signal, and vice-versa, and that's just not going to work.
If you're a glutton for punishment, you should use a transformer for both signals, since in theory a transformer introduces some amount of phase distortion. But at 1 KHz, for anything decent, this effect is insignificant (under 2 degrees), so don't worry.
--jhawk
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