Dolby Laboratories CP650 Installation Manual Page 158

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Dolby
®
CP650 Installation Manual External Control
D-4
D.2 Control via Remotes Connector
CP650 control using single-wire communications via the Remotes and Aud. Fader
connector is available in CP650 system software version 1.1.5 and later. To do so, it
is recommended that a Cat. No. 779 Remote Control Unit or Cat. No. 771 Remote
Fader be used.
Dolby Laboratories occasionally receives requests to interface the CP650 to other
types of computers, for the purposes of remote control. While this was never intended
to be a feature of the remote port, it may be possible to command the CP650 to
change the fader level, select any one of the eight front-panel formats, and to toggle
the mute status.
The remote port interface consists of three wires. One provides 15 volts at low current
to power the remote units. The other two lines of the remote port are ground (0 volts)
and data. The ground line should be connected to the reference ground voltage of the
serial port on the computer. This is usually found on pin 7 of a serial 25-pin
D-connector, or pin 5 of a 9-pin D-connector.
The single data line presents the single biggest challenge of interfacing another
computer to the CP650. All industry-standard RS-232 ports have two data lines: one
to transmit, and one to receive. The CP650 data line works by placing the single data
line in a high-impedance state while listening for transmitted data, and driving
voltages onto this line when it needs to send information. In other words, the single
data line is a receiving line for all devices, except when they need to send data, at
which point it is a transmitting line.
Thus, when the CP650 needs to communicate, or a remote accessory needs to
communicate with the CP650, it takes control of the single data line just long enough
to send its message. It then must place the line back in a high-impedance state, and
listen for a response.
Interfacing an external computer’s serial port to the single data line can be tricky. The
actual requirement, as stated above, is for the serial port to “tri-state” its transmitter
when it is not sending.
If one cannot engineer this type of circuit for the computer’s serial port, an alternate
method can be tried, but it may damage the serial port. Pass the serial port’s transmit
line through a series-connected resistor, and tie that line to both the serial port receive
line and the CP650’s data line. It is possible that the serial port’s transmitter (which
does not tri-state) can be overridden by the CP650’s transmitter, and yet still function
as a transmitter when necessary (when the CP650 is in High Impedance mode). But
the outcome cannot be guaranteed.
To do this, start with a high resistance (say, 100 kΩ), and reduce it until the
computer’s serial port is able to both send and receive data. The exact value required
depends on the types of chips used in the serial port.
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