User`s guide
INSTALLING THE TRAVELER HARDWARE
28
DO YOU NEED A SYNCHRONIZER?
Whether or not you’ll need a synchronizer depends 
on your gear and what you will be doing with your 
Traveler sys tem. The following pages give you 
specific information about common sync 
scenarios. At least one of them will likely apply to 
you. Here are some general considerations to help 
you figure out if you need (or want) a synchronizer 
for your Traveler system.
Yo u don’t need a synchronizer if...
As explained earlier, the Traveler’s digital audio 
clock must be phase-locked (synchronized) with 
other connected digital audio devices to achieve 
clean digital transfers between them. Can this be 
accomplished without an additional digital audio 
synchronizer? It depends on the nature of the other 
devices, and what you want to do with them. You 
don’t need a synchronizer if the device has a way of 
locking itself directly to the Traveler’s clock (via 
ADAT lightpipe, S/PDIF, AES/EBU or word clock), 
AND if the device carries no sense of location in 
time. A digital mixer is a good example: it can slave 
to its ADAT lightpipe connection from the Traveler, 
and it has no sense of time; it just passes audio 
through for mixing.
A stand-alone digital recorder, on the other hand, 
does have a sense of location in time, either via 
SMPTE time code or via its own sample address. 
For example, if you want to fly tracks back and 
forth between your computer and an Alesis hard 
disk recorder while maintaining the audio’s 
position in time, the ADAT Sync port on the 
Traveler le ts you do so without a separate 
synchronizer — and with sample-accurate 
precision, as long as you’re using sample-accurate 
software. Just connect the Traveler directly to the 
Alesis recorder (or other ADAT Sync-compatible 
device) as discussed in “Sample-accurate ADAT 
sync with no synchronizer” on page 31. But if you 
also want transport control over the entire rig 
(including the hard disk recorder) from your audio 
software, you’ll need a MIDI Machine Control-
compatible synchronizer such as MOTU’s MIDI 
Timepiece AV, as discussed in “Sample-accurate 
sync” on page 29. If you are simply using a stand-
alone recorder as a way to capture live tracks that 
you then transfer in one pass into the computer, no 
synchronizer is required because the tracks will 
remain in perfect phase lock with each other as you 
transfer them together. You can simply slave the 
stand-alone recorder to the optical output from the 
Traveler as  ex plained in “Syncing optical devices” 
on page 34.
Transport control from your computer
If you have stand-alone digital recorders connected 
to the Traveler, and they support ADAT Sync, your 
audio software — if it supports MIDI Machine 
Control (MMC) — allows you to control the 
transports of everything from your computer. 
Most advanced audio programs support MMC. To 
do this, you’ll also need an MMC-compatible 
ADAT synchronizer such as a MOTU MIDI 
Timepiece AV. Synchronizers like these allow you 
to play, stop, rewind and locate all of your tape 
decks using the transport controls in the audio 
software. If your audio software supports sample-
accurate sync, you can do so with sample-accurate 
precision. The following pages show you how to 
achieve MMC control, where possible.
Continuous sync to SMPTE / MTC
The Traveler can synchronize directly to SMPTE 
time code. If your audio software supports sample-
accurate sync, it can also resolve to time code via 
the Traveler. If your software does not support 
sample-accurate sync, you need a dedicated 
synchronizer, as illustrated on the following pages.
!Traveler Manual/Win Page 28 Monday, November 29, 2004 3:50 PM










