Owner manual

PRODUCT MANUALPRODUCT MANUAL
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PLAYER MODE USB HARD DRIVES VS. USB FLASH DRIVES
LR-16 Transport Key MMC Command Mackie Control Command
Skip Back Rewind Rewind
Skip Forward Fast Forward Fast Forward
Stop Stop Stop
Play/Pause Play Play
Record Record Record
When the LR-16 is connected to the computer over USB and one of the two protocols are
activated, the LR-16 will appear as a 1x1 MIDI device to the OS X/Windows machine, labeled as
LR-16.
Refer to the users manual of you DAW for more details about conguring it to work with either
MMC or Mackie Control protocols. Select the device labeled LR-16 when conguring the MMC/
Mackie Control device with your particular DAW.
9. PLAYER MODE
The LR-16 offers a handy “Player Mode” where it acts as a stereo wave player, playing back 44.1
and 48 kHz stereo wave les that are stored in the “Music” folder on the attached USB drive.
Playback of these stereo les can be useful for playing pre-show music before the concert, break
music during intermission, and post-show music when the concert is nished. The stereo les will
be output from both the front-panel headphone output, as well as the rear panel line level stereo
output, which can be patched into the live sound console, for playback to the audience.
To transfer stereo audio les to the Music folder of the USB drive:
Attach the drive to a computer containing the desired les
Copy the desired stereo wave les from the computer’s hard drive, to the “Music” folder on
the drive
Attach the USB drive to the LR-16.
The les now residing in the “Music” folder of the attached drive will now be available to the
LR-16 in Player mode.
! Note: The LR-16 only plays back wave format les, it does not play back stereo les in other
commonly available consumer formats such as MP3, AAC, WMA, and FLAC.
If the stereo song les you wish to use are in one of these other formats, make sure to rst convert
them to the wave le format, using an audio utility on your computer.
There are many freeware utilities available online that can convert from the above unsupported
formats, to a wave le. For example, the free of charge Apple Itunes software performs this type
of conversion; instructions for doing so can be read at http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1550
To play back the stereo les on the attached drive, perform the following steps:
9.1. Start playback
Switch the LR-16 into the player mode by pressing the Mode button. All of the wave les
stored in the ‘Music’ folder on the USB drive will be displayed in an alphabetical list.
Press the Up / Down or Previous / Next buttons to select a song
Press the Select or Play/Pause buttons to start playback of the currently selected song.
The song that is currently playing will be displayed in the bottom line of the display with an
accompanying playback icon.
9.2. Using the Player Menu
When the LR-16 is in Player Mode, it contains its own custom menu screen, offering settings that
are specic to that mode.
To enter the Player mode menu, press the Menu button. The Player menu will be displayed, and
four separate playback modes can be set.
Normal: The current song will be played once and then the transport will stop
Continuous: All of the songs contained in the “Music” folder will be played in alphabetical
sequence
Repeat: The currently selected song will be repeated endlessly
Shufe: The LR-16 will continuously choose songs to play at random.
Press the Up / Down buttons to select the desired setting, then press the Select button.
10. USB HARD DRIVES VS. USB FLASH DRIVES
When recording audio with the Live Recorder LR-16 and a connected USB drive, it is important to
understand the difference between the two key types of USB drives available in the marketplace.
10.1. USB Hard Drive
A USB hard drive is a traditional “moving parts” hard drive that records its data on spinning
platters. This is the recommended type of USB drive to use with the Live Recorder LR-16, as its
data read/write speeds are the most reliable and consistent
You are free to use two different types of USB hard drives with the Live Recorder LR-16:
Large capacity 3.5” hard drives, that traditionally receive their electrical power from a
dedicated external power supply that connects to a wall outlet
Smaller capacity 2.5” hard drives, that are “bus-powered” and receive their power from the
same USB data cable that connects it to the Live Recorder LR-16. This solution tends to
be more convenient since there is one less cable to connect and the drives are smaller and
lighter.
10.2. USB Flash Drive
A USB Flash drive is a USB drive that uses ash memory and contains no moving parts. Examples
of a USB ash drive would be:
USB “thumb drives” or “keychain drives”, small in size and available in capacities of 4GB
through 128 GB.
USB “Solid State Drives” (aka SSD), commonly houses in a 2.5” drive enclosure and
commanding a price premium. Common sizes include 120 Gigabytes through 1 Terabyte.