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User Friendly Interface

An LCD and full-time LED meters make setup, adjustment and programming of OPTIMOD 5700i easy - you can always see the metering while you are adjusting the processor. Navigation is by dedicated buttons, soft buttons (whose functions are context-sensitive), and a large rotary knob. The LEDs show all metering functions of the processing structure (Two-Band or Five-Band) in use.
 

Absolute Control of Peak Modulation

The 5700i provides universal transmitter protection and audio processing for FM broadcast. It can be configured to interface ideally with any commonly found transmission system in the world, analog or digital.

The 5700i provides pre-emphasis limiting for the internationally used pre-emphasis curves of 50µs and 75µs.

The 5700i achieves extremely tight peak control at all its outputs - analog, AES3 (for both the analog FM and HD channels), and composite baseband.

The stereo encoder has two outputs with independent level controls, each capable of driving 75Ω in parallel with 47,000pF (100ft / 30m of coaxial cable).

By integrating the stereo encoder with the audio processing, the 5700i eliminates the overshoot problems that waste valuable modulation in traditional external encoders.

The 5700i prevents aliasing distortion in subsequent stereo encoders or transmission links by providing bandwidth limiting and overshoot compensated 15 kHz low-pass filters ahead of the 5700i’s audio outputs and stereo encoder.

The 5700i has an internal, DSP-based stereo encoder (with a patented “half-cosine interpolation” composite limiter operating at 512 kHz sample rate) to generate the pilot tone stereo baseband signal and control its peak level. The composite limiter is a unique, “you can only do this in DSP” process that beats composite clippers by preserving stereo imaging while fully protecting the stereo pilot tone, RDS/RBDS, and subcarriers.

The stereo encoder’s stereo sub-channel modulator can operate in normal double sideband mode and in an experimental compatible single sideband mode that is offered to enable users to compare and assess the two modes.

The Digital Radio processing chain offers an ITU-R BS.1770-3 Loudness Meter and Safety Limiter for use in countries that enforce a BS.1770 loudness limit on digital radio broadcasts. The 5700i/HD implements “true peak” control in its HD processing chain by oversampling the HD peak limiter’s sidechain at 256 kHz. This allows the 5700i to prevent clipping in a playback device’s analog signal path by predicting and controlling the analog peak level following the playback device’s reconstruction filter to an accuracy of better than 0.5 dB. For typical program material, accuracy is 0.2 dB

Without true peak control, analog clipping can occur even if all peak values of the digital samples are below 0 dBFS. This phenomenon has also been termed “0 dBFS+.”

Thanks to true peak control, sample rate conversion, unless it removes high frequency program energy or introduces group delay distortion, cannot cause sample peaks to increase more than 0.5 dB. For example, sample rate con- version from 48 kHz to 44.1 kHz is highly unlikely to cause sample peak clipping in the 44.1 kHz audio data.
 

Flexible Configuration

A built-in RDS/RBDS encoder supports the most important RDS features and can be associated with processing presets so that mixed-format stations can automatically update the “program type” field to complement the programming by recalling a audio processing preset for a given program type.

OPTIMOD 5700i is supplied with analog and AES3 digital inputs and outputs. The digital input and the two digital outputs are equipped with samplerate converters and can operate at 32 kHz, 44.1 kHz, 48 kHz, 88.1 kHz, and 96 kHz sample rates. The pre-emphasis status and output levels are separately adjustable for the analog and digital outputs. Each output can emit the analog FM processed signal, the analog FM processed signal with diversity delay applied, the digital radio processed signal, or the low-delay monitor signal.

A loop-through connection is provided to enable a ratings encoder (such as Arbitron®) to be inserted at the output of the AGC before the analog-FM and HD processing paths split or between the output of the audio processing and the input to the stereo encoder. In “ratings encoder loop-through mode,” the second digital output drives the ratings encoder.

Failsafe switching detects loss of audio on the primary input, which you can assign to be the analog or digital input. If audio is lost on the primary input, the 5700i can switch automatically to the secondary input.

The 5700i has two independent equalizers, multiband compressors, and peak limiters for the FM analog and digital media processing channels, allowing you to separately optimize the processing for each.

An AES11 sync input allows you to synchronize the output sample rate of either (or both) AES3 outputs to this input. You can also synchronize the out- puts to the AES3 digital input or to 5700i’s internal clock. The sync source of each AES3 output is independently selectable.

A wordclock/10 MHz sync reference input accepts a 1x 5V p-p squarewave wordclock signal at 32, 44.1, 48, 88.2, or 96 kHz, or a 10 MHz sinewave or squarewave signal, 0.5 to 5 V peak. 10 MHz is a common output frequency produced by GPS and rubidium frequency standards. You can configure the 5700i to lock its 19 kHz pilot tone and output sample frequency to this input. This is particularly advantageous in single-frequency network applications.

A defeatable diversity delay can delay the FM analog processing output up to 16.2 seconds. Delay can be trimmed in intervals of one sample of 64 kHz to match the analog and digital paths in the HD Radio system, eliminating the need to use the delay built into the HD Radio exciter and permitting the 5700i’s internal stereo encoder and composite limiter to drive the analog FM exciter. This feature allows you to use the 5700i in dual-processor HD installations where the digital channel receives independent processing from a processor like Orban’s Optimod 6300 or Optimod-PC 1101(e). Each output (Analog, Digital 1, Digital 2, Composite) can be independently configured to emit the delayed or undelayed signal.

The analog inputs are transformerless, balanced 10kΩ instrumentation- amplifier circuits. The analog outputs are transformerless balanced and floating (with 50Ω impedance) to ensure highest transparency and accurate pulse response.

The 5700i has two independent composite baseband outputs with digitally programmable output levels. Robust line drivers enable them to drive 100 feet of RG-59 coaxial cable without audible performance degradation.

The 5700i’s two subcarrier inputs are mixed with the output of the 5700i’s stereo encoder before application to the composite output connectors. One input can be re-jumpered to provide a 19 kHz pilot reference output. Both inputs have internal level trims to accommodate subcarrier generators with output levels as low as 220 mV.

The 5700i precisely controls the audio bandwidth of its analog FM processing to 16.5 kHz. This prevents significant overshoots in uncompressed digital links operating at a 44.1 kHz-sample rate or higher and prevents interference to the pilot tone and RDS (or RBDS) subcarrier. The bandwidth of the 5700i’s digital radio output is adjustable in 1 kHz increments between 15 kHz and 20 kHz.

The 5700i has a defeatable multiplex power limiter that controls the multiplex power to ITU-R BS412 standards. An adjustable threshold allows a station to achieve maximum legal multiplex power even if the downstream transmission system introduces peak overshoots into the 5700i-processed signal. It allows the user to adjust the processor’s subjective setup controls freely without violating BS412 limits, regardless of program material. The multiplex power limiter acts on all outputs (not just the composite output). In its most common configuration, it reduces clipper drive when it reduces power, simultaneously reducing clipping distortion. However, to accommodate customers who wish to use heavier clipping to achieve a certain sound, the MPX power controller can be configured to reduce gain after the clippers.

All input, output, and power connections are rigorously RFI-suppressed to Orban’s traditional exacting standards, ensuring trouble-free installation.

The 5700i is designed and certified to meet all applicable international safety and emissions standards.
 

Adaptability through Multiple Audio Processing Structures

A processing structure is a program that operates as a complete audio processing system. The 5700i realizes its processing structures as a series of high- speed mathematical computations made by Digital Signal Processing (DSP) chips.

The 5700i features four processing structures: Five-Band (or “Multiband”) for a consistent, “processed” sound with 17 ms delay (typical), free from undesirable side effects, Low-Latency Five-Band (12 ms delay), Ultra-Low-Latency Five- Band (3.7 ms delay), and Two-Band (17 or 22 ms delay) for a transparent sound that preserves the frequency balance of the original program material. A special Two-Band preset creates a no-compromise “Protect” function that is functionally similar to the “Protect” structures in earlier Orban digital processors.

The 5700i can increase the density and loudness of the program material by multiband compression, limiting, and clipping—improving the consistency of the station’s sound and increasing loudness and definition remarkably, without producing unpleasant side effects.

The 5700i rides gain over an adjustable range of up to 25 dB, compressing dynamic range and compensating for both operator gain-riding errors and gain in- consistencies in automated systems.

The 5700i’s Two-Band processing structures can be made phase-linear to maximize audible transparency.
 

Controllable

The 5700i can be remote-controlled by 5-12V pulses applied to eight programmable, optically-isolated “general-purpose interface” (GPI) ports available at the REMOTE INTERFACE connector on the rear panel.

5700i PC Remote software is a graphical application that runs under Windows 2000/XP/Vista/7/8/8.1. It communicates with a given 5700i via TCP/IP over modem, direct serial, and Ethernet connections. Additionally, a Telnet-style terminal server accepts simple ASCII commands, facilitating easy interfacing to automation systems.You can configure PC Remote to switch between many 5700is via a convenient organizer that supports giving any 5700i an alias and grouping multiple 5700is into folders. Clicking a 5700i’s icon causes PC Remote to connect to that 5700i through an Ethernet network, or initiates a Windows Dial-Up or Direct Cable Connection if appropriate. The PC Remote software allows the user to access all 5700i features (including advanced controls not available from the 5700i’s front panel), and allows the user to archive and restore presets, automation lists, and system setups (containing I/O levels, digital word lengths, GPI functional assignments, etc.).

SNMP support allows you to control and monitor the 5700i over your network by using the SNMP protocol and compatible software.

The 5700i includes a Telnet client that allows presets to be recalled via batch files using the free PuTTY and Plink applications. The commands are simple ASCII strings, facilitating interface to automation systems that can emit such strings through an Ethernet or RS232 serial connection.

OPTIMOD 5700i contains a versatile real-time clock, which allows automation of various events (including recalling presets) at pre-programmed times. The clock can be set automatically from an Internet timeserver.

A Bypass Test Mode can be invoked locally, by remote control (from either the 5700i’s GPI port or the 5700i PC Remote application), or by automation to permit broadcast system test and alignment or “proof of performance” tests.

The system contains a built-in line-up tone generator, facilitating quick and accurate level setting in any system.

A software upgrade can be done easily by running Orban-supplied downloadable upgrade software on a PC. The upgrade can occur remotely through the 5700i’s Ethernet port or serial port (connected to an external modem), or locally (by connecting a Windows® computer to the 5700i’s serial port through the supplied null modem cable).

Silence alarm and digital audio fault tally outputs are available.