3Com Two Way Radio CP 1 User Manual

Panorama Ambience  
Reverb  
Surround  
C P-1  
Dig ita l Aud io  
Enviro nm e nt  
Pro c e sso r  
O wne r's  
Ma nua l  
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Safety Suggestions  
Read Instructions Read all safety and operating instruc-  
tions before operating the unit.  
Servicing Do not attemptany servicebeyondthatdescribed  
in the operating instructions. Refer all other service needs to  
qualified service personnel.  
Retain Instructions Keep the safety and operating instruc-  
tions for future reference.  
Damage requiring service The unit should be serviced by  
qualified service personnel when:  
Heed Warnings Adheretoall warnings ontheunit andin the  
operating instructions.  
the power supply cord or the plug has been damaged,  
objects have fallen, or liquid has been spilled into the  
unit,  
Follow Instructions Follow operating and use instructions.  
the unit has been exposed to rain,  
Heat Keep the unit away from heat sources such as radia-  
tors, heat registers, stoves, etc., including amplifiers which  
produce heat.  
the unit does not appear to operate normally or exhibits  
a marked change in performance,  
the unit has been dropped, or the enclosure damaged.  
Ventilation Make sure that thelocation or positionof the unit  
doesnot interferewithitsproper ventilation.For example,the  
unit should not be situated on a bed, sofa, rug, or similar  
surface that may block the ventilation openings; or, placedin  
acabinetwhich impedestheflowofair throughtheventilation  
openings.  
Outdoor Antenna Grounding If an outside antenna is  
connected to the receiver, be sure the antenna system is  
grounded so as to provide some protection against voltage  
surges and built-up static charges. Section 810 of the Na-  
tional Electrical Code, ANSI/NFPA No. 70-1984, provides  
information with respect to proper grounding of the mast and  
supporting structure, grounding of the lead-in wire to an  
antenna-discharge unit, size of grounding conductors, loca-  
tion of antenna-discharge unit, connection to grounding  
electrodes, and requirements for the grounding electrode.  
Wall or Ceiling Mounting Do not mount the unit to a wall or  
ceiling except as recommended by the manufacturer.  
Power Sources Connect the unit only to a power supply of  
thetypedescribedin theoperatinginstructions, or asmarked  
on the unit.  
Grounding or Polarization* Take precautions not to defeat  
the grounding or polarization of the unit’s power cord.  
*Not applicable in Canada.  
Power Cord Protection Route power supply cords so that  
they are not likely tobewalked onor pinchedbyitems placed  
on or against them, paying particular attention to cords at  
plugs, convenience receptacles, and the point at which they  
exit from the unit.  
Nonuse Periods Unplug the power cord of the unit from the  
outlet when the unit is to be left unused for a long period of  
time.  
Water and Moisture Do not use the unit near water — for  
example, near a sink, in a wet basement, near a swimming  
pool, near an open window, etc.  
Power Lines An outside antenna should be located away  
from power lines.  
Object and liquid entryDo not allow objects to fall or liquids  
to be spilled into the enclosure through openings.  
Cleaning The unit should be cleaned only as recommended  
by the manufacturer.  
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C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
Table of Contents  
1
2
Controls and Indicators  
Introduction  
1
2
3
4
The Front Panel  
The Rear Panel  
The Remote Control  
Connection and Calibration  
Installation  
7
7
Connections to Other Equipment  
Setting the Main Input  
and Output Levels  
9
Calibration of the  
Panorama Program  
11  
13  
3
4
Speaker Set-Up and Configuration  
Using The Programs  
To Load, Modify  
and Store Programs  
The Programs:  
Panorama  
19  
21  
22  
24  
26  
Ambience  
Reverb  
Surround  
To Rename and Store  
a Register  
29  
31  
35  
53  
5
6
7
Troubleshooting  
Theory and Design  
Specifications  
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C o ntro ls  
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C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
All of the programs in the Lexicon CP-1 Digital Audio Environment  
Processor have a common goal: to draw you, the listener, more deeply into  
a musical performance or a film. For music the CP-1 uses unique digital  
processing to re-create either the original recording space or a new one of  
your choosing. For films it offers an extremely accurate version of Dolby Pro  
Logic Surround decoding and our own decoding for monaural film sound-  
tracks. The increase in impact of a musical performance or film when heard  
with the CP-1 is enormous, especially when widely spaced multiple loud-  
speakers are provided, but even without additional loudspeakers signifi-  
cant gains are made.  
Introduction  
To re-create the experience of being at a performance the CP-1 draws on  
recent studies of concert-hall acoustics, and applies this research to home  
listening rooms. The object is to increase the sideways-moving sound in a  
room, thus increasing Spatial Impression, or SI.  
The CP-1 increases SI by either extracting it from the original recording,  
using the Panorama or Surround programs, or by generating a new acoustic  
environment with Ambience or Reverb.  
When a listener is in the correct spot the Panorama program provides an  
almost ideal re-creation of the original recording space. It works by using  
digital processing to cancel the crosstalk between the listener's ears, effec-  
tively spreading the sound from the two front loudspeakers in a wide arc in  
front of the listener. With the optional addition of rear speakers, Panorama  
can be almost spooky in its realism.  
The CP-1 Reverb and Ambience programs provide signals for driving  
widely spaced side and rear loudspeakers, directly exciting sideways  
sound and heightening the listener impact over a large listening area.  
(When there are no side speakers, Panorama is used to increase the side-  
ways sound from the main speakers.)  
The Ambience and Reverberation programs transform the listening room  
into a new acoustic space, letting you choose an environment which  
matches your music or your mood. Unlike some previous hall simulators,  
the CP-1 provides full stereo processing. The Ambience program generates  
the side and rear reflection patterns of idealized rooms and concert halls.  
The larger spaces add the true depth and realism of a concert hall to classical  
and popular music, while the smaller spaces are ideal for jazz and rock. The  
Reverberation program is similar, but places more emphasis on rich, dense  
reverberant decay than on early reflections. It is especially good for  
simulating large, highly reverberant spaces.  
For films encoded with Dolby Stereo, Lexicon has incorporated into the  
CP-1 the first completely digital Dolby Pro Logic Surround decoder, and the  
only one with automatic correction of azimuth and channel-balance errors  
(the most common problems in currently available films). The CP-1 also  
provides a program for playing music through a Surround speaker set-up  
(Stereo Logic), and a program for expanding monaural film sound tracks  
(Mono Logic).  
Pa g e 1  
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Le xic o n  
The Front Panel  
e xic o n  
DIGITAL AUDIO ENVIRONMENT PROCESSOR  
CP-1  
I
II  
SOURCE  
TAPE  
PRE  
POST  
SYSTEM EFFECT  
MUTE MUTE  
POWER  
INPUT LEVEL  
TITLE: dlby lgo  
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SOURCE  
MONITOR  
TAPE  
Source  
The SOURCE buttons select one of two identical stereo pairs of audio  
inputs. Ordinarily Input I will be connected to the main outputs of your  
stereo preamp and the second input will be a spare. In video installations,  
Input I will be connected to the main audio outputs of your TV receiver,  
VCR or audio/ video control center. Input II can then accept the outputs of  
a separate system or the audio outputs of a video disc or CD player.  
Monitor  
Tape  
The MONITOR button selects SOURCE I/ II or TAPE IN. The Tape inputs  
are provided to accommodate a recorder if the CP-1 occupies a previously  
used tape monitor loop.  
The PRE and POST Tape switch determines whether CP-1 processing if  
applied before or after tape output. PRE means that the tape deck gets the  
signal unaltered (PRE-processing); POST applies CP-1 processing to the  
tape output (POST-processing).To record CP-1 processing onto tape the  
CP-1 must be in the two-speaker mode (Configuration 1) with the POST  
button engaged.  
Input Level  
The INPUT LEVEL control and its display allow you to match the level of  
the incoming signal to the CP-1s digital encoding circuits. When correctly  
set, loud passages will light the entire row of green LEDs without flashing  
the red ones.  
Alphanumeric  
Display  
The alphanumeric display shows both the program that is running and its  
modifiable parameters. The CP-1 has 24 registers: PRESETs 1-12 are  
configured at the factory; those labeled USER 1-12 are available for storage  
of programs customized by the user.  
Indicator  
Lights  
The unlabeled LED to the left of the System Mute Indicator lights when the  
CP-1 detects a signal from the remote control. The SYSTEM MUTE LED  
indicates that unprocessed audio is no longer passing through to the CP-1's  
main outputs. The EFFECT MUTE LED indicates that the CP-1s processed  
audio is no longer passing through to its outputs.  
Power  
System On/ Off.  
Pa g e 2  
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The Rear Panel  
LEVEL  
TAPE TAPE  
OUT IN  
REAR  
SIDE  
MAIN CENTER SUB  
INPUTS  
II  
I
L
L
L
L
CENTER/OUT  
PHANTOM/IN  
OUTPUTS  
R
R
R
R
SUB WOOFER  
Stereo outputs for rear and side power amplifiers, with level adjusting  
knobs. The procedure for balancing these outputs (as well as the center  
channel and subwoofer) with the main pair begins on page 9.  
Rear and Side  
Outputs  
Main, Center  
and Subwoofer  
Outputs  
Main outputs, with level adjustment. Level-setting of these outputs must  
precede adjustment of the auxiliary channels.  
The adjustment of the subwoofer output should be done only after all other  
channels are calibrated. (See page 11.)  
Center/Out  
Phantom/In  
Center channel output with level control and button. Push the button in if  
you have no center channel; leave it out if a center speaker is connected.  
NOTE: Leaving this button out with no center channel will cause the  
Surround programs to malfunction.  
Inputs and outputs for an additional audio or video tape deck (audio  
portion only) or to replace the monitor loop occupied by the CP-1.  
Tape Out/In  
Inputs  
Two sets of main inputs, selected by the SOURCE I/ II buttons.  
Pa g e 3  
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The Remote Control  
PANORAMA  
BANK  
1
2
3
NORMAL  
SMALL  
WIDE  
BINAURAL  
LARGE  
AMBIENCE  
PARAM  
6
4
5
MEDIUM  
REVERB  
7
8
9
SMALL  
MONO  
MEDIUM  
LARGE  
SURROUND  
10 11  
12  
STEREO  
F
R
EFFECT  
BALANCE  
VOLUME  
B
L
TITLE: dlby lgo  
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SYSTEM  
EFFECT  
Adobe1
CREATOR:  
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MUTE  
The Programs  
Panorama  
The PANORAMA programs provide enhanced lateral sound (and hence  
greater spaciousness and envelopment) for either music or films. This  
program can utilize left and right rear channels but is also effective using  
only the two front loudspeakers. NORMAL(1) and WIDE(2) differ primar-  
ily in their initial Effect Levels. BINAURAL(3) is for playback on loudspeak-  
ers of recordings made with a dummy head.  
Ambience  
The AMBIENCE programs simulate concert halls of three different sizes,  
generating reflections of appropriate directionality, delay and spectral  
shape and sending them to the side and rear speakers. The Ambience  
programs provide adjustable recirculation through the Liveness parameter  
but for long reverberation times, use REVERB. Both AMBIENCE and  
REVERB are true stereo simulators.  
Reverb  
The REVERB programs, like AMBIENCE, simulate rooms of three sizes  
with the aid of side and rear channels. These programs have fewer specific  
initial reflections than AMBIENCE but richer and smoother reverberant  
decay. REVERB is especially good for simulating large, highly reverberant  
spaces.  
Pa g e 4  
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Surround  
The SURROUND programs work with film sound tracks to recreate the  
theater experience. MONOLOGIC (10) expands the music and effects on  
monaural films into the additional channels while leaving the dialog in the  
front center. STEREO LOGIC (11) enhances music with surround speakers  
and also allows the listener to adjust certain parameters for film sound that  
are fixed in Program 12. PRO LOGIC (12) provides the same decoding used  
in Dolby Stereo theater systems, using up to eight speakers for front, center,  
side, rear and subwoofer channels.  
The BANK button switches between the 12 factory-preset programs and 12  
user registers where customized programs may be stored. The program  
number doesn't change: if you are using Preset program 9, BANK switches  
to User program 9 and vice-versa. Holding BANK for a few seconds puts  
the CP-1 into Configuration mode, in which the three Parameter buttons  
adjust the LCD contrast and select one of the 12 speaker setups illustrated  
on page 13.  
Bank  
The three PARAMETER buttons allow selection and adjustment of variable  
parameters within each program. Pushing PARAM displays the current  
parameter for five seconds; pushing it again before the display changes  
selects the next parameter. Pressing PARAM UP or DOWN will display and  
adjust the current parameter, whether or not PARAM has been pushed. A  
single push changes the parameter by one unit; holding the button for more  
than one second causes the values to change rapidly in an auto-repeat mode.  
PARAM can also put the CP-1 into TEST mode. (See page 19.)  
Parameter  
EFFECT: UP and DOWN adjust the level of all signals added by the CP-1.  
Effect*  
BALANCE: F and B adjust the levels of the rear speakers relative to the  
sides and fronts.  
Balance*  
BALANCE: L and R adjust the left/ right balance of all speakers: front, sides  
and rear. It assumes the function of the balance control on your preamp or  
receiver.  
VOLUME: UP and DOWN adjust the level of all channels simultaneously.  
It assumes the function of the volume control on your preamp or receiver.  
Volume*  
SYSTEM MUTE turns off all outputs and lights both SYSTEM and EFFECT Mute  
MUTE LEDs. Pushing EFFECT MUTE while in system- mute mode turns  
the effects alone back on.  
EFFECT MUTE alternately turns off and on all signals added by the CP-1.  
Use it to compare the sound with and without CP-1 processing. In TEST  
mode EFFECT MUTE clears all user memories. (See page 19.)  
*The first push of either of this pair of buttons displays the current value for five seconds; another push during that time increases or decreases  
the displayed value. Holding the button down for 1 second engages auto-repeat.  
Pa g e 5  
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Pa g e 6  
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C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
Installation  
The CP-1 may be installed on a shelf or in a standard 19" equipment rack,  
using the optional rack-mounting hardware (Lexicon part #021-06639).  
Connect the power cord to a wall outlet or to a switched outlet on the back  
of your preamplifier. Observe the following precautions:  
Make sure the remote control receiver, located on the right side of the  
front panel, is unobstructed. The remote control must be in line of sight  
to this receiver for proper operation. The CP-1 may be placed in a glass-  
doored cabinet but smoked glass will make the display hard to read.  
Precautions  
Select a dry, well-ventilated location out of direct sunlight.  
Do not stack the CP-1 directly above heat-producing equipment such as  
power amplifiers.  
Avoid placing the CP-1 near unshielded TV or FM antennas. The CP-1  
may interfere with some FM tuners if it is placed immediately above or  
below them.  
Install two AAA batteries in the CP-1s remote control.  
Connections to  
Other Equipment  
CENTER  
AUDIO  
PREAMP  
MAIN  
OUT  
AMP  
REAR  
AMPS  
TAPE  
OUT/IN  
CENTER  
REAR  
PROGRAM EQ  
or  
DYNAMIC RANGE  
PROCESSOR  
I
INPUTS  
II  
MAIN  
SIDE  
MAIN  
POWER AMPS  
(SPEAKER  
EQ)  
CP-1  
SUB  
WOOFER  
TAPE  
OUT/IN  
SIDE  
AMPS  
VCR  
or  
CASSETTE DECK  
VCR, TV, VIDEO  
CONTROL CENTER  
AUDIO  
OUT  
Connections with an  
Audio Preamp  
SUBWOOFER  
AMP  
CENTER  
AMP  
REAR  
AMPS  
CENTER  
MAIN OUT  
REAR  
MAIN  
SIDE  
CD  
I
MAIN  
POWER AMPS  
(SPEAKER  
EQ)  
INPUTS  
CP-1  
II  
AUDIO OUT  
VIDEO  
DISC  
SUB  
WOOFER  
TAPE  
SIDE  
AMPS  
OUT/IN  
AUDIO or VIDEO  
CASSETTE  
RECORDER  
Using the CP-1 as an  
Audio Preamp  
SUBWOOFER  
AMP  
Pa g e 7  
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TAPE  
OUT  
TAPE  
IN  
INTEGRATED AMP,  
PREAMP or RECEIVER  
CENTER  
AMP  
MAIN  
CENTER  
REAR  
I
REAR  
AMPS  
INPUTS  
CP-1  
II  
SIDE  
VCR, TV, VIDEO  
CONTROL CENTER  
AUDIO  
OUT  
SUB  
WOOFER  
SIDE  
AMPS  
TAPE  
OUT/IN  
VCR  
or  
CASSETTE DECK  
Connecting the CP-1  
in a Tape Monitor Loop  
SUBWOOFER  
AMP  
Note  
If you have a receiver with no external access to the preamplifier outputs (or  
you wish to use the tape monitor loop on your preamp), you can use a tape  
output or external processor loop to the CP-1. However, any change in the  
receivers volume control after the system is adjusted will upset the balance  
between the main and auxiliary speakers. If you are using this configura-  
tion, you should now turn the receivers volume control all the way down.  
If there was a tape deck previously connected to your receiver's monitor  
loop, connect it to the CP-1's tape outputs and inputs.  
Turn off ALL audio and video components, including individual power  
amplifiers. (Unplug any preamps and power amps that dont have  
switches.) Locate the gain trim potentiometers on the CP-1 rear panel; these  
are knobs at the top of the panel, marked REAR, SIDE, MAIN, CENTER and  
SUB. Turn each one all the way down (counterclockwise as viewed from  
the back).  
Audio Inputs  
Connect the main outputs of your audio preamplifier or the preamplifier  
output of your receiver to Input I on the CP-1.  
Note  
Inputs I and II are electrically identical and can be used interchangeably.  
The CP-1 will also act as a line-level preamp with three inputs (including the  
built-in tape monitor loop) if you wish to connect, for example, the audio  
outputs from a TV receiver/ monitor, a CD player and a VCR directly to it.  
Audio Outputs  
Connect the CP-1s MAIN outputs to your main stereo channels. Connect  
any additional amplifier/ speaker combinations to the remaining outputs  
on the CP-1: SIDE to the side amplifiers, REAR to the rears, CENTER to the  
center- channel amplifier and SUB WOOFER to the subwoofer amp.  
Locate the button below the SUB potentiometer marked CENTER/ OUT,  
PHANTOM/ IN. If you have no center front speaker, push it in; if you have  
a center channel, make sure this button is in the out position.  
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C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
Front Panel  
Adjustments  
Push the INPUT I button on the front panel. Push the MONITOR SOURCE  
and TAPE PRE buttons. Turn the INPUT LEVEL knob all the way down  
(counterclockwise).  
The CP-1 has its own volume and balance controls, which you will be using  
in place of the ones on your existing preamp or receiver. Set the gains in your  
main stereo channels for optimum dynamic range as follows.  
Setting the  
Main Input and  
Output Levels  
For best performance, the CP-1 should always be driven to its full Input  
Level.  
Turn on the CP-1. For the first two seconds the display should read:  
LEXICON CP-1, with a software version number and a copyright notice.  
For another two seconds there will be a configuration message, then a  
program name will appear. When the power-up routine is finished, aim the  
remote control at the unit and push the EFFECT MUTE button (bottom row,  
right). The message: EFFECTS OUTPUTS OFF will appear in the display for  
about 4 seconds and the EFFECT MUTE LED on the front panel will light.  
Turn on your preamp, choose a signal source and play some loud music (a  
heavily compressed FM rock station or heavy-metal CD is ideal). Turn the  
preamps volume control up about three quarters of the way. Adjust the CP-  
1’s INPUT LEVEL control until the red level-indicator LEDs at the right of  
the display blink occasionally, then reduce the INPUT LEVEL until only the  
green LEDs are lit.  
Input Levels  
If there are audible differences between the levels of the source you used for  
this calibration procedure and other sources, you may have to readjust the  
INPUT LEVEL to accommodate them. Where possible, try to use the output  
level controls on the various sources to equalize levels.  
Be sure the Input Level is as high as  
possible without flashing red.  
Set all output levels to zero; set Vol-  
ume UP almost all the way.  
Push and hold the VOLUME DOWN button on the remote control until the  
bar graph on the display completely disappears and the display reads  
SYSTEM VOLUME -64 dB. Turn on the main stereo power amplifier, then  
hold the VOLUME UP button until the CP-1s volume is at -05 dB. If the  
back-panel potentiometers are turned all the way down, as they should be,  
you will not hear any sound yet. If you hear loud sound as the CP-1s  
volume advances, stop and reset all rear-panel gain potentiometers fully  
counterclockwise until they are completely off before proceeding.  
With the CP-1s remote volume at -05 dB, slowly advance the rear- panel  
potentiometer for the MAIN OUTPUTS until the sound is as loud as you  
will normally play the system. Do not touch the gain on your preamp or  
receiver after this adjustment. Use only the CP-1 volume control. (Make  
sure that this level is not high enough to cause speaker distortion or  
amplifier clipping.)  
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Le xic o n  
Output Levels  
The output level potentiomenters (the small knobs above the output con-  
nectors on the CP-1 rear panel) allow you to balance the sound levels of all  
the channels in your system relative to each other. The most important thing  
to keep in mind when calibrating the system is to keep these potentiometers  
set as low as possible. Your normal listening level (not background muzak  
level) shouldbe with the system volume (as indicated by the front panel  
LCD) set to around -06dB. This keeps the processor at its optimum signal  
levels while allowing headroom if you really want to crank it up.  
Main Output  
Set Main Output so system is as  
loud as you are ever going to need it.  
(Be careful that this level does not  
cause speaker distortion or amplifier  
clipping.)  
Balancing  
Additional Channels  
If you are using only two audio channels, level adjustment is now complete.  
If you have additional channels, use the following procedure to set their  
levels to match the main stereo pair.  
1. Select  
Pro Logic  
2.Push Param to  
CALIBRATE  
Use the VOLUME DOWN button to reduce the CP-1s level to about -20 dB.  
If the EFFECT MUTE LED is on, push EFFECT MUTE to cancel it. Push  
program button 12; the display will read: PRESET 12 on the left and  
SURROUND PRO LOGIC on the right. Push PARAM four times or until  
the display reads: CALIBRATE. Push PARAM UP to turn on the calibration  
signal.  
3.Push UP  
for ON  
The sound you hear is a band of noise centered around 1 kHz, being sent in  
sequence to: all channels, left side plus left front, center, right side plus right  
front and rear channel(s). If you have a center speaker, the rear-panel  
CENTER/ PHANTOM button should be out. Since all levels are down  
except for MAIN, you will hear only: both fronts, left only, silence, right  
only, silence. If you have no center speaker, the rear-panel button should  
be in and you will hear: both fronts, left-only, both fronts,right only, silence.  
Now turn on the remaining power amplifiers and turn up SIDE, REAR and  
CENTER gain until the individual loudness of the sounds reaching your  
listening position is the same and the all-channel signal is evenly distributed  
from all speakers. The CALIBRATE ON display will remain for as long as  
you use this mode. When the front, center, side and rear channels are  
balanced, press PARAM DOWN to turn off the calibration signal.  
Finally, if you are using a separate low-frequency channel, use music or the  
test signal of your choice to adjust the SUB WOOFER gain until the low bass  
balances the rest of the spectrum. This completes the initial connections and  
level adjustments of the CP-1.  
Adjust other output levels until all  
directions are equally loud.  
Pa g e 10  
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C o nne c tio n  
a nd  
C a lib ra tio n  
C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
Calibration of the  
Panorama Program  
PANORAMA works by canceling the sound going from each speaker to the  
opposite ear. The effectiveness of the program is highly dependent on the  
geometry of your front loudspeakers, the room and your listening position.  
The correct timing of the canceling signal varies with the angle between  
your main speakers. The SPEAKER ANGLE parameter, displayed in de-  
grees, adjusts for wide or narrow speaker spacing. For the two canceling  
signals to arrive at both ears at the same time you must be centered precisely  
between the speakers. The Listener Position parameter (LISTENER POS)  
delays the corrections from either channel and allows adjustment for an off-  
center listening chair or for asymmetrical speaker placement.  
60°  
The ideal setup for Panorama is an acoustically dead room, with speakers  
well away from the walls, and the listener on the center line between the  
speakers. The effect is diminished by reflections from nearby surfaces.  
Furthermore, if the listener sees the two speakers from different angles their  
responses will differ. The addition of acoustic absorption (soft furniture,  
carpets and drapes) or diffusion (furniture or books that form irregular  
surfaces and break up reflections) and time spent shifting speakers and  
chair into more precise alignment (use a tape measure rather than relying  
on your eyes) will all be rewarded.  
SPEAKER ANGLE is the angle be-  
tween the main speakers as seen from  
the listening position -here it is about  
60°.  
Select Panorama; Push PARAM to  
display: CALIBRATE; then push  
Param UP to: ON LEFT ONLY.  
Find a mono source, such as an announcer on FM radio or a mono film, and  
listen for a tightly focused center image of speech or singing. If the image  
is off-center, adjust the CP-1's BALANCE control. (The narrower the  
monaural image, the better Panorama will work.) Perform the following  
setup from a relaxed, comfortable position in your listening chair with your  
head facing the center point between the speakers.  
1. Reduce the volume to about -20 dB. If the display reads: PRESET at the  
top left, push Program button 2; if not, push BANK, then button 2 to load  
PRESET PANORAMA WIDE. Push PARAM eight times (until the  
display reads: CALIBRATE OFF). Push PARAM UP to turn on the left-  
channel calibration signal.  
SILENCE  
}
NOISE  
2. The test signal should appear to come from off to your left side, well  
beyond the left speaker, with near-total silence in the right ear. Still  
facing forward, move your head from side to side until the effect is  
strongest. If you can find the sweet spot from the confines of your chair,  
go directly to step 4; otherwise perform step 3.  
Move your head from side to side to  
find the position where the noise is  
full left, and the right ear hears noth-  
ing.  
3. Push PARAM once so the display reads: LISTENER POS. Push PARAM  
UP and DOWN until you hear the strongest effect. Then push PARAM  
four times, or until the display reads: CALIBRATE LEFT ONLY.  
4. Push PARAM UP until the display reads: CALIBRATE RIGHT ONLY.  
Again, shift your head from side to side to find the sweet spot, this time  
looking for the point where the silence in the left ear is deepest. Compare  
the locations of the two sweet spots from steps 2 and 4. If they coincide,  
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C o nne c tio n  
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C a lib ra tio n  
Le xic o n  
go on to step 6; otherwise, perform step 5.  
5. Push PARAM twice so the display reads: SPEAKER ANGLE. If the sweet  
spot from step 2 (LEFT ONLY) is to the left of the sweet spot from step  
4 (Right ONLY), push PARAM UP once. If the the step 2 sweet spot is to  
the right of the step 4 sweet spot, push PARAM DOWN. Push PARAM  
to return to CALIBRATE RIGHT ONLY and go back to step 2.  
SILENCE  
NOISE  
6. Adjust your chair so the single sweet spot is in the center, or use PARAM  
to get to LISTENER POS and adjust this parameter to move the sweet  
spot to where you want it. Use PARAM to step to CALIBRATE and push  
PARAM DOWN until the calibration signal goes off.  
Push PARAM UP again for RIGHT  
ONLY. If your left ear is in the silent  
band, the speaker angle is correct.  
Repeat for the right side.  
The Panorama Program is now calibrated. To store it, see page 27. Use  
PARAM to display the final values of LISTENER POS and SPEAKER  
ANGLE. Note these values and use them for all forms of Panorama,  
including the Panorama subsections of AMBIENCE and REVERB.  
If the two silent bands are too close,  
raise SPEAKER ANGLE; if too far  
apart, lower SPEAKER ANGLE.  
To store, see page 29.  
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Sp e a ke r  
Se t-Up a nd  
3
C o nfig ura tio n  
C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
Configuration  
Choose the diagram from the Speaker Configuration Chart that corre-  
sponds to your room and note its number. Press the BANK button and hold  
it for a few seconds. The display will read: LCD CONTRAST ADJ with a  
bright bar. The CP-1 is now in Configuration mode. Within this mode,  
operations are carried out using only the three PARAM buttons. Configu-  
ration mode will be canceled if any other button is pressed or if 10 seconds  
pass without a button push.  
Speaker Configurations  
Subwoofers are not shown in any of these  
configurations. Consult the subwoofer  
owner's manual or your dealer for proper  
placement of subwoofers, remembering  
that corners are almost always best.  
Center Phantom  
Button IN  
Center Phantom  
Button IN  
Side and rear speakers may sound better if  
mounted above the listener, (See Page 15.)  
1
2
3
Center Phantom  
Button IN  
Center Phantom  
Button IN  
4
5
6
Center Phantom  
Button IN  
7
9
8
speaker connected to  
center output  
speakers connected to  
Main outputs  
Center Phantom  
Button IN  
speakers connected to  
Side outputs  
10  
11  
12  
speakers connected to  
Rear outputs  
Press the PARAM UP or DOWN buttons until the contrast of the display is  
at a maximum as seen from your listening chair. Then push PARAM to  
enter the Configuration menu. Consulting the Speaker Configuration  
Chart, push PARAM UP or DOWN until the figure and the description in  
the display match your room.  
Note: If you are using only one rear  
speaker it may be hooked up to either  
the left or right rear output, as long  
as you use the correct Configuration  
number.  
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Sp e a ke r  
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C o nfig ura tio n  
Le xic o n  
How much power do you need? That depends on a number of variables —  
How efficient are your speakers? How big is the room? How loud do you  
play the system? Generally, the demands on the side and rear channels are  
higher for film sound than for music. The center channel is actually the most  
important channel on most film soundtracks. Your center amp/ speaker  
combination should be able to achieve the same sound pressure levels as the  
main left and right speakers. Increasing the Bass Blend parameter in the Pro  
Logic and Stereo Logic modes will help relieve the center channel of the  
heavy low frequency demands, but is not a suitable substitute for a decent  
amp/ speaker combination. The surrounds will not generally require quite  
as much power, but there can be substantial energy requirements during  
crescendos. Consider at least 45-60 watts minimum for your rear channel  
amplifier.  
Notes on  
Amplifiers  
Notes on Speaker  
Placement  
The CP-1’s Configuration routine allows a wide range of choices in speaker  
and room set-ups to maintain optimal performance as your system ex-  
pands. If you are starting with a conventional two-channel system, in what  
order should you add additional channels? The answer depends on  
whether you are primarily interested in audio or video.  
For Film  
6
2
10  
Good  
Better  
Best  
The film enthusiast with only two stereo speakers should place them  
relatively close on either side of the screen and use Panorama for both music  
and films. Beyond this, the very first priority should be a center channel  
above or below the screen for dialog (Configuration 2). An alternative is  
Configuration 3, in which two front speakers and one rear are used with  
either the Panorama or Pro Logic programs.  
A dramatic improvement will be noticed when increasing from two or three  
speakers to four. These should be arranged as in Configuration 6, but with  
the front left and right speakers spread quite wide, perhaps all the way  
around to the sides — making a diamond pattern with the listener in the  
center. How widely you space the front channels will depend on how  
deeply immersed in the sound track you want to be; the full diamond  
configuration can considerably heighten the sense of emotional involve-  
ment in many movies. This arrangement has the advantage of using  
amplifiers and speakers in pairs.  
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C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
If your center channel speaker is smaller than the left and right fronts,  
increasing BASS BLEND will remove low bass from the center and increase  
it in the left and right speakers. The center channel is so important that if it  
is not possible to have an extra center speaker it is frequently better to plug  
the center output of the CP-1 into the audio input of your video monitor and  
use its built-in speaker (if it has one) than it is to run the dialog through the  
main loudspeakers.  
If the system will have a direct view (as opposed to projection) television,  
a shielded speaker must be used to prevent interference with the picture.  
Only one speaker should be used, as using two speakers to reproduce a  
mono signal may cause loss of intelligiblity through inter-speaker interfer-  
ence (comb filtering).  
The center speaker should be placed as close to the TV as possible, and as  
close to the horizontal axis of the main speaker's tweeters as possible. Side  
speakers should be at the sides, or a little forward, of the listening position.  
If the system is for music only (no film), the sides can be as far as 20 degrees  
behind the listener. For film use, they should be slightly ahead of the  
listener. Place the sides at, or slightly above, ear level. Ceiling placement is  
not recommended, as this will reduce the stereo separation and will be quite  
strange for film, where Pro Logic sends the same information to the sides  
and fronts. The rears should be separated as much as possible and kept  
away from the listener. Here, ceiling mounts are acceptable, as is mounting  
hig (or in) the rear or back side walls.  
The best set-up for those who like both music and films is Configuration 10.  
The addition of side speakers allows all forms of source material to be  
palyed without compromise.  
The button on the back of the CP-1 labeled CENTER OUT/PHANTOM  
IN is very important in the operation of the Surround programs. Make  
sure the button is out if you have a center speaker and in if you have none.  
With the button in (Phantom Mode) the center channel is mixed in with  
the two main outputs; the side outputs carry the Left and Right signals;  
the center channel is turned off.  
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Sp e a ke r  
Se t-Up a nd  
C o nfig ura tio n  
Le xic o n  
For Music  
Center Phantom  
Button IN  
Center Phantom  
Button IN  
Center Phantom  
Button IN  
5
9
1
Good  
Best  
Better  
If your main interest is music, you will most likely begin with two high-  
quality main speakers (Configuration 1). Here the Panorama program  
alone will add substantial enhancement in spatial impression, image size,  
image depth and freedom from coloration of central sources.  
The audiophiles first addition should be two side channels (Configuration  
5) and, after that, two rear channels (Configuration 9). For maximum effect  
with the Reverberation programs, two additional speakers can be placed in  
the front corners of the room, driven from the rear amplifiers. The side  
speakers, however, are the most important.  
With Configuration 5, movies can be played with the Pro Logic program;  
the rear-channel sound will automatically be routed to the side speakers. If  
you have six speakers (Configuration 9) an additional stereo amplifier can  
power both a center channel and a subwoofer.  
The height of the extra speakers will depend on the furnishings in the room.  
In real halls much of the reflected energy comes from above, and placing the  
side and rear speakers above the listener can be very effective. They also  
work well on normal speaker stands. Placing the speakers too high in a  
narrow room may reduce the spaciousness, since this makes the sound  
come from the ceiling instead of the side walls.  
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C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
The Subwoofer Output is a monaural signal created by summing the left,  
right and center outputs, then filtering out frequencies above 100 Hz at a  
rate of 12 dB per octave.  
Subwoofer Connections  
Connecting a subwoofer to the CP-1 rear-panel Subwoofer Output, adds  
bass energy without removing any from your main speakers. Note, how-  
ever, that many of the subwoofers curently on the market have their own  
crossover (complementary low and high pass filters) and amp built in.  
Often it is better not to use the CP-1 Subwoofer output (which is already  
filtered at 100Hz 12dB/ octave). Instead, we recommend using the main  
outputs as follows.  
Connect the CP-1 main (front) and left and right outputs to the inputs of the  
subwoofer crossover. Then connect the subwoofer output (high pass fil-  
tered version of the input) to the amplifier driving the main speakers. This  
has the advantage of bi-amping the main speakers — all the low bass is  
handled by the subwoofer and the main speakers only handle mid-bass on  
up. This usually reasults in a better-sounding main speaker.  
If you want to run the main speakers full range, the subwoofer can be wired  
in parallel to the main amp using a Y-connector. Alternatively, the CP-1  
Subwoofer ouput can, of course, be used. If there is not enough gain for the  
subwoofer (because it's being filtered by both the CP-1 and its own cross-  
over), use one of the methods described above.  
Since the center channel will still be runing full range, you should use the  
Bass Blend parameter in the Pro Logic and Stereo Logic modes. This protects  
the center channel speaker by splitting low frequencies off the center  
channel and feeding them to the left and right front outputs. Remember to  
turn up this parameter in any User Register you program, particularly in  
Stereo Logic. A little experimentation goes a long way in determining the  
optimum value for Bass Blend. Around 6 is usually best. When this  
parameter is set too high, some male vocals will sound chesty; too low and  
you lose bass.  
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Se t-Up a nd  
C o nfig ura tio n  
Le xic o n  
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Using the  
Pro g ra m s  
C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
4
The CP-1 contains four basic programs: Panorama, Ambience, Reverb and  
Surround. Each program has three variations which occupy one row on the  
remote control.  
To Load, Modify and  
Store Programs  
Pushing one of the buttons numbered 1 through 12 during normal opera-  
tion will load that program. Whenever the CP-1 is turned on, it will load the  
program that was running when it was turned off.  
To load a program:  
1. Push BANK to select  
USER or PRESET  
Each program has a number of parameters that you can vary with the three  
PARAMETER keys. The parameters for each program are listed in the  
section on individual programs. The PARAM key displays the current  
parameter and its value for about five seconds. If PARAM is pushed during  
this period it will select the next parameter. Pushing the PARAM UP or  
DOWN keys at any time will display and change the parameters value in  
the direction you have selected.  
BANK  
PARAM  
The CP-1 contains a total of 24 program registers organized into two banks  
of 12 each. Each of the 12 program buttons, therefore, will load one of the  
factory presets or one of the 12 user registers, depending on which bank is  
currently in use. The factory preset programs are denoted by: PRESET in the  
upper left of the display, with the program number beneath. The program  
title appears in the right half of the display, with the basic program name  
above and the variation below. The BANK button switches between  
whichever of the 12 PRESET variations is running and the corresponding  
USER register or vice-versa. For example, if you are running USER 7,  
pressing BANK will switch to PRESET 7.  
2. Push a program # to load.  
3. Changes to PARAM, EFFECT  
LEVEL and F/B BALANCE store  
automatically in USER Bank.  
While running a Preset program you can change any of its parameters to see  
how they affect the sound. These changes will be lost when you turn the CP-  
1 off or change programs, unless you explicitly store the changes. (See page  
27.)Changes made in the value of parameters within a User program,  
however, are stored with that program immediately and automatically.  
This includes settings of EFFECT LEVEL and FRONT/ REAR BALANCE  
but not of the LEFT/ RIGHT BALANCE or VOLUME controls. You do not  
have to perform any specific storage routine to create a new variation in a  
User register; it happens whenever you change a parameter.  
F
R
EFFECT  
BALANCE  
VOLUME  
B
L
4. To store changes for a PRESET  
Bank program, see page 27.  
When the CP-1 leaves the factory each User register contains a duplicate of  
the Preset program of the same number. If you maintain this arrangement,  
the labels on the remote will continue to describe the contents of both  
registers. You can, however, store a version of any program in any of the  
User registers.  
Test Mode  
The CP-1’s User registers can be cleared and reloaded with duplicates of the  
factory Preset programs at any time. Press and hold the PARAM key while  
you turn the CP-1 on; continue to hold down PARAM for 5 seconds. This  
puts the unit into TEST mode. Push EFFECT MUTE to clear and reload the  
User registers and to restore all initial settings of Volume, Balance, Contrast,  
Configuration, etc. The display will read: RESTORE DEFAULTS. Push  
PARAM again to begin normal operation.  
SYSTEM  
EFFECT  
MUTE  
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The Prog ra m s:  
Pa nora m a  
Le xic o n  
Panorama  
Panorama extracts the natural ambience from recorded music and moves it  
outward from the speakers, producing greater width and depth of image  
and a feeling of enhanced spaciousness. The program adds no additional  
sound but expands the existing stereo image. Panorama also works with  
Dolby Stereo movies, bringing the surround track outward into the room.  
Panorama works with just two loudspeakers. If side speakers present,  
Panorama disables them and substitutes its own simulation. The front  
speakers are driven entirely from the CP-1s digital circuits. Panorama will  
also send a stereo difference signal (left channel minus right or vice-versa)  
to the rear loudspeakers if you have them. NORMAL (1) will provide  
enough expansion for most music, while WIDE (2) has a more pronounced  
effect on the image. BINAURAL (3) has special low-frequency compensa-  
tion and is meant specifically for true binaural recordings made with a  
dummy head.  
Panorama NORMAL is designed to work with recordings whose bass  
energy is evenly distributed across the stereo image. Panorama WIDE is  
designed for recordings with centered bass (almost all pop and rock). The  
only other difference between these two programs is their initial EFFECT  
LEVEL. If you need more bass from Panorama NORMAL, switch to WIDE  
and reduce the EFFECT LEVEL. Conversely, if Panorama WIDE is too bass-  
heavy, switch to NORMAL and increase the EFFECT LEVEL.  
Note  
The location of the front speakers and the listening position are crucial to  
Panoramas effectiveness and for best results your system and the CP-1  
together should be set up and calibrated according to the procedure on page  
10. The strength of the Panorama effect drops off as you move away from  
the prime listening position, especially to the sides. Video systems with the  
main loudspeakers spaced closely on either side of a TV screen will produce  
a diminished effect over a somewhat wider area than set-ups with a large  
included angle between the speakers.  
Program  
Parameters  
Parameter  
Initial Value  
Range  
INPUT BALANCE  
LISTENER POS  
SPEAKER ANGLE  
LF WIDTH  
(Centered)  
127  
49 degrees  
0
Full Left-Full Right  
0-254  
29-90 degrees  
-25 - +25  
REAR LEVEL  
16*  
0-32  
REAR ROLLOFF  
REAR DELAY  
CALIBRATE  
SET PROGRAM NAME  
MEMORIZE PROGRAM  
2.9 kHz  
16 ms  
OFF  
329 Hz-14.1 kHz  
0-32 ms  
Left, Right, Both  
NA  
NA  
NA  
NA  
* 0 in BINAURAL, or if no rear speakers specified  
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The Prog ra m s:  
Pa nora m a  
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EFFECT LEVEL sets the amount of crosstalk cancellation, and thus the  
apparent front width. It is the most important user adjustment to Panorama,  
and has been given its own button on the remote. When EFFECT LEVEL is  
all the way down, Input Balance, LF Width and the rear outputs are still  
active.  
Effect Level  
Input Balance  
INPUT BALANCE compensates for the occasional source with audible  
channel imbalance. It is especially important when using Panorama for  
movies. If the movie sound tracks are unbalanced, the dialog will wander  
away from the center; adjusting the Input Balance corrects for this.  
Listener Position/  
Speaker Angle  
LISTENER POS and SPEAKER ANGLE are determined using the calibra-  
tion procedure on page 10. The resulting value for Listener Position should  
then be used for the Panorama sections of Ambience and Reverb.  
LF Width  
LF WIDTH controls the amount of low-frequency spatial correction that is  
applied to the signal. A positive value of LF WIDTH means the difference  
(left minus right channel) signal has additional energy below 500 Hz, while  
the sum (left plus right) signal has correspondingly less. (Negative settings  
can compensate for recordings with too much of this property.) LF WIDTH  
can add needed spaciousness and warmth to classical recordings made with  
coincident or near-coincident miking. (See Chapter 5: Theory and Design.)  
Rear Level  
Rear Delay  
REAR LEVEL adjusts the loudness of the signals sent to the rear channels.  
REAR DELAY adjusts the amount of time between the appearance of a  
signal in the front channels and its emergence from the rear. Generally, the  
correct delay is about 16 milliseconds but the setting depends on speaker  
set-up and source material. In general, the delay should not be so great that  
the rear sound becomes identifiable as a distinct source.  
Rear Rolloff  
Calibrate  
REAR ROLLOFF sets the frequency above which the rear-channel sound is  
attenuated. It should be high enough to give presence and airiness to the  
rear sound but not so high as to place distracting instrumental overtones or  
other sounds behind you. The appropriate setting will vary with program  
material.  
The use of the CALIBRATE mode is described in the setup instructions  
beginning on page 11.  
Set Program Name/  
Memorize Program  
The procedures for naming a new version of the program (SET PROGRAM  
NAME) and storing it in one of the User registers (MEMORIZE PROGRAM)  
are described on page 29.  
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The Prog ra m s:  
Am b ie nc e  
Le xic o n  
Ambience  
Ambience generates the appropriate early reflections for stereo simulation  
of one of six different halls — one rectangular hall and one fan-shaped hall  
in small, medium and large sizes — and sends the reflections to the side and  
rear speakers. For systems with only two loudspeakers, Ambience also  
incorporates a version of Panorama that will spread the stereo image and  
add the reflections it generates to the expanded sound stage.  
The initial EFFECT LEVEL is highest for Program 4 and progressively lower  
for Programs 5 and 6. It will be easier to hear exactly what the parameters  
do if the effect level is temporarily turned all the way up.  
Program  
Parameters  
Parameter  
Initial Value  
Range  
ROOM SHAPE  
LIVENESS  
Rectangle  
Rectangle, Fan  
0-6  
4
ROLLOFF  
PANORAMA EFF  
LISTENER POS  
s/ m/ l=5.9/ 3.6/ 2.9 kHz  
329 Hz-14.1 kHz  
0-32  
28*  
128  
0-254  
SPEAKER ANGLE  
SPEECH DETECTION  
SET PROGRAM NAME  
MEMORIZE PROGRAM  
51 degrees  
ON  
33-91 degrees  
On/ Off  
NA  
NA  
NA  
NA  
* 0 if side speakers are specified  
Effect Level  
EFFECT LEVEL adjusts the loudness of the side and rear speakers. When  
there are no side speakers, it adjusts the amount of ambient signal mixed  
into the main loudspeakers. EFFECT LEVEL is the most important user  
adjustment in AMBIENCE and REVERB, and has been given its own button  
on the remote. It should be adjusted as high as possible without making the  
extra speakers individually audible.  
Room Shape  
Liveness  
ROOM SHAPE selects one of two basic hall shapes. Refer to Chapter 5:  
Theory and Design, for a discussion of the properties of the two.  
The LIVENESS parameter adjusts the amount of recirculation within the  
program. The higher the value, the more reflective the surfaces of the  
simulated space and the longer the sound will take to decay. At very high  
values the decay is audibly less smooth than in the Reverb programs, which  
are more effective at simulating very live spaces.  
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The Prog ra m s:  
Am b ie nc e  
C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
Rolloff  
ROLLOFF mimics the absorption of the air in the hall and its initial value is  
therefore more pronounced (the rolloff begins at a lower frequency) the  
larger the space.  
Panorama Effect  
Listener Position  
Speaker Angle  
PANORAMA EFFECT adjusts the strength of the signal used to expand the  
stereo image outward from the front two speakers. It is only needed when  
side speakers are absent.  
LISTENER POS compensates for the relative distance of the two main  
speakers from the prime listening area. It should be set for the value arrived  
at in the Panorama set-up procedure on page 11.  
SPEAKER ANGLE compensates for differing distances between your front  
speakers. It affects only the Panorama Effect and is only needed when side  
speakers are absent. The Speaker Angle can be set to the value reached in  
the setup procedure on page 11, but the program may also work well at  
lower values.  
The image expansion will be strongest at the one location in the room for  
which the program has been calibrated (See page 10). It will diminish  
somewhat as you move forward or back from that location and more rapidly  
as you move from side to side.  
Speech Detection  
The Speech Detection circuit distinguishes monaural speech from other  
inputs. Whenever stereo signals are present, the right and left input chan-  
nels are used independently as inputs to the ambience synthesis. If there is  
a strong monaural speaking voice present at the same time, this component  
of the input is reduced while the stereo component is increased. If the input  
signal is pure monaural speech the input is almost entirely attenuated.  
SPEECH DETECTION is a real benefit to some popular music (where  
spoken voice, such as rap, occurs along with music), stereo television, and  
early stereo movies. Any stereo material which was not carefully mixed for  
Surround is a good candidate for playing through Ambience with SPEECH  
DETECTION On.  
Set Program Name/  
Memorize Program  
The procedures for naming a new version of the program (SET PROGRAM  
NAME) and storing it in one of the User registers (MEMORIZE PROGRAM)  
are described on page 29.  
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The Prog ra m s:  
Re ve rb  
Le xic o n  
Reverb  
The Reverberation program differs from Ambience in that it does not  
simulate the early reflections of specific halls, but emphasizes rich, smooth  
reverberant decay in small, medium or large spaces. It works well for  
simulating a space with a long reverberation times relative to its size, such  
as a reverberant chamber, church or the like. For systems with only two  
loudspeakers, Reverb also incorporates a version of Panorama that will  
spread the stereo image and add the reflections it generates to the expanded  
sound stage.  
The initial EFFECT LEVEL is highest for Program 7 and progressively  
lower for Programs 8 and 9. It will be easier to hear exactly what the  
parameters do if the EFFECT LEVEL is temporarily turned all the way up.  
Program  
Parameters  
Parameter  
MID RT  
Initial Value  
Range  
small-0.46 sec  
medium - 0.92 sec  
large - 2.16 sec  
small-x1 MID RT  
medium-1.25xMID RT  
large-1.25xMID RT  
s/ m/ l=5.9/ 4.2/ 3.6 kHz  
0/ 28*  
0.32 - 2.8 sec  
0.64 - 5.6 sec  
1.28 - 11.2 sec  
0.7 xMID RT  
1 xMID RT  
1.25xMID RT  
329 Hz - 14.1 kHz  
1-32  
BASS RT  
TREBLE  
PANORAMA EFF  
LISTENER POS  
128  
0-254  
SPEAKER ANGLE  
PRE-DELAY  
SET PROGRAM NAME  
MEMORIZE PROGRAM  
51 degrees  
33-91 degrees  
0-120 ms  
0
NA  
NA  
NA  
NA  
* 0 if side speakers are specified  
Effect Level  
EFFECT LEVEL adjusts the loudness of the side and rear speakers. When  
there are no side speakers, it adjusts the amount of ambient signal mixed  
into the main loudspeakers. EFFECT LEVEL is the most important user  
adjustment in AMBIENCE and REVERB, and has been given its own button  
on the remote. It should be set as high as possible without making the extra  
speakers individually audible.  
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The Prog ra m s:  
Re ve rb  
C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
Mid RT  
MID RT (Midrange Reverberation Time) is the time required for midrange  
sounds to decay 60 dB in level. Your choice of small, medium or large  
synthesized space determines both the initial value and the available range  
of MID RT.  
Bass RT  
BASS RT, the low-frequency reverb time, depends on the MID RT and is  
expressed as a multiplier. BASS RT is equal to MID RT in Program 7, while  
in the medium and large versions of the program it is 25% higher (as is the  
case in most actual halls with acceptably warm subjective frequency bal-  
ance).  
Treble  
TREBLE rolloff, as in the Ambience programs, is preset to mimic air  
absorption in actual spaces, being more pronounced in the larger ones.  
Panorama Effect  
PANORAMA EFFECT adjusts the strength of the signal used to expand the  
stereo image outward from the front two speakers. Its initial value is zero,  
unless you have configured the CP-1 for no side loudspeakers.  
LISTENER POS compensates for the relative distances of the two speakers  
from the prime listening area. It should be set for the value arrived at in the  
Panorama set-up procedure on page 11.  
Listener Position  
Speaker Angle  
SPEAKER ANGLE compensates for varying distance between your front  
speakers. The Speaker Angle can be set to the value reached in the setup  
procedure on page 11, but the program may also work well at lower values.  
The image expansion is strongest at the one location in the room for which  
the program has been calibrated. ( See page 11.) It will diminish somewhat  
as you move forward or back from that location, and more rapidly as you  
move from side to side.  
Pre-Delay  
PRE-DELAY increases the delay between the direct sound and the onset of  
reverberation. Some pre-delay is inherent in the programs, and the preset  
value of 0 is usually a good starting point. Increasing the pre-delay will  
make the hall sound larger.  
Set Program Name/  
Memorize Program  
The procedures for naming a new version of the program (SET PROGRAM  
NAME) and storing it in one of the User registers (MEMORIZE PROGRAM)  
are described on page 29.  
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The Prog ra m s:  
Surround  
Le xic o n  
Surround  
The SURROUND programs are designed for film sound tracks and they  
make full use of additional loudspeakers at the center, sides and rear of the  
room. MONO LOGIC takes a monaural soundtrack and sends music and  
sound effects to the sides and rear through a room simulator program, while  
keeping dialog in the center. STEREO LOGIC is meant for playing music  
through a system whose speakers are laid out primarily for films. PRO  
LOGIC is Lexicon’s all-digital implementation of the Dolby Pro Logic  
Surround decoding process.  
The term Dolby Stereo refers to both movies and equipment used exclusively for theatrical  
presentation. When one of these movies is transferred to commercial video media, the special  
audio encoding of the Dolby Motion Picture matrix is retained in the two-channel stereo  
soundtrack. The resulting video software and the hardware designed to reproduce it use the  
name Dolby Surround to distinguish it from the theatrical optical format.  
Dolby Pro Logic Surround decoding is the licensed consumer version of the professional  
Dolby Stereo cinema processors, which allows the home viewer to obtain all the spatial  
effects of the soundtrack heard in a theatre over a wider range of seating positions than  
conventional Dolby Surround playback.  
Effect Level  
EFFECT LEVEL conrols the level of all channels except the center. The center  
will appear stronger if you turn down EFFECT LEVEL a few dB. With  
EFFECT LEVEL all the way down, the center only will play.  
Program  
Parameters  
Mono Logic  
Parameter  
Initial Value  
Range  
TREBLE  
SET PROGRAM NAME  
MEMORIZE PROGRAM  
2.3 kHz  
NA  
NA  
329 Hz - 14.1 kHz  
NA  
NA  
Treble  
TREBLE is the only adjustable parameter in MONO LOGIC. It regulates the  
treble cut in the side and rear channels. The optimal setting for this  
parameter will vary widely with the age, quality and condition of the  
source material.  
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The Prog ra m s:  
Surround  
C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
Stereo Logic  
Parameter  
Initial Value  
Range  
FRONT EFFECT  
REAR EFFECT  
REAR ROLLOFF  
8
8*  
14.1 kHz  
0-16  
0-16  
329 Hz-14.1 kHz  
Automatic  
0-16  
BASS BLEND  
0
AUTO AZIMUTH/ BAL  
REAR DELAY  
REAR NOISE CHIP  
CALIBRATE  
SET PROGRAM NAME  
MEMORIZE PROGRAM  
OFF  
8 ms  
OFF  
OFF  
NA  
Off, On  
0-32 ms  
Off, On  
Off, On  
NA  
NA  
NA  
* 0 if no rear speakers specified  
Pro Logic  
Parameter  
Initial Value  
Range  
REAR DELAY  
AUTO AZIMUTH/ BAL  
BASS BLEND  
20 ms  
On  
6
16-32 ms  
Off, On  
0-16  
CALIBRATE  
SET PROGRAM NAME  
MEMORIZE PROGRAM  
Off  
NA  
NA  
Off, On  
NA  
NA  
REAR DELAY in both STEREO LOGIC and PRO LOGIC is adjustable.  
Generally, the correct delay is about 20 milliseconds but the setting depends  
on speaker set-up and source material. In general, the delay should not be  
so great that the rear sound becomes identifiable as a distinct source.  
Rear Delay  
Rear Rolloff  
REAR ROLLOFF controls the treble attenuation and should be adjusted on  
music for maximum airiness and spatial realism without causing specific  
instruments to seem to come from behind you. Stereo Logics REAR  
ROLLOFF parameter contains an AUTOMATIC mode. In this mode the  
rear channels are rolled off above 7 kHz until the logic circuits steer a sound  
effect to the rear speakers, whereupon the bandwidth opens up to beyond  
15 kHz. This will enhance the realism of some effects that move from front  
to rear or vice-versa.  
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The Prog ra m s:  
Surround  
Le xic o n  
Program Parameters cont'd  
Auto Azimuth/  
Balance  
The AUTO AZIMUTH/ BAL parameter should be set to ON for films, OFF  
for music. When it is on, special digital circuits continually monitor the  
dialog and adjust both the relative level and time offset of the two channels  
to keep the dialog properly centered. This automatic feature is why the CP-  
1 does not have or need a front-panel input balance control for Dolby  
Surround decoding.  
Bass Blend  
BASS BLEND takes the low bass from the center, where it is in many film  
and music mixes, and distributes it instead to the left and right front-  
channel speakers. Its initial value is 0 in the Stereo Logic program and 6 in  
Pro Logic. This is valuable because in many video installations the center  
speaker is smaller than the two main stereo speakers and is, therefore, less  
capable of handling the lowest frequencies.  
Front Effect/  
Rear Effect  
The essence of the Dolby PRO LOGIC circuit is that dialog, music and sound  
effects are dynamically directed to the output channels, a process called  
steering. The FRONT EFFECT and REAR EFFECT parameters in Stereo  
Logic allow you to adjust the amount of this steering. Both are preset for  
their maximum values in PRO LOGIC. In STEREO LOGIC, FRONT  
EFFECT has a default value of 8, which is equivalent to 6 dB of steering; at  
this level, central (monaural) sources are reduced in level by 6 dB in the main  
stereo speakers. With FRONT and REAR EFFECT both set to 0, STEREO  
LOGIC becomes the equivalent of a simple non-steered Dolby Surround  
decoder. If you have no rear speakers, REAR EFFECT should be set to 0. The  
CP-1 will set this parameter automatically when you specify a speaker  
configuration with no rear channels. (See page 13.)  
Rear Noise Chip  
Dolby Surround decoding specifications call for a special form of Dolby B-  
type noise reduction. Because STEREO LOGIC is also meant for music, the  
rear-channel sound has more flexibility, including REAR NOISE CHIP, a  
parameter that allows you to turn this Dolby NR circuit off.  
Calibrate  
The CALIBRATE mode in Stereo Logic and Pro Logic is for setting up and  
checking the levels of the channels in multi-speaker systems. Its use is  
covered in the section on Balancing Additional Channels on page 10.  
Set Program Name/  
Memorize Program  
The procedures for naming a new version of the program (SET PROGRAM  
NAME) and storing it in one of the User registers (MEMORIZE PROGRAM)  
are described on page 29.  
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Using the  
Pro g ra m s  
C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
To Rename and  
Store a Register  
The previous sections describe the CP-1s four basic programs and all of  
their variable parameters. Any changes in the parameters of a program in  
the USER bank will be automatically recorded and stored for future use.  
The CP-1 also allows you to store a new version of any PRESET or USER  
program in any USER register.  
USER banks store automatically.  
As you cycle through the parameters in any program with the PARAM key  
you will come to two labeled: SET PROGRAM NAME and MEMORIZE  
PROGRAM. To rename your new program, press the PARAM key until the  
display reads: SET PROGRAM NAME. At this point a cursor (the underline  
character) appears in the bottom row of the LCD display. Each of the 12  
program keys will now move the cursor to one of twelve available spaces in  
the display, while the PARAM UP and DOWN keys cycle through the  
available list of characters, beginning with the one currently occupying the  
space.  
Naming a Register  
1.Push Param to  
2. Push program  
# to select  
SET PROGRAM  
NAME  
a position  
3.Push UP/DOWN  
to select a  
With the upper half of the display reading: SET PROGRAM NAME, push  
1 on the remote (also marked PANORAMA NORMAL). The cursor will  
move to the leftmost column of the program name. Now push PARAM UP  
or DOWN until the character you want appears in the space. (Holding  
either button for one second activates an auto-repeat mode to speed you  
through the list.) All letters are available, in upper or lower case, as are digits  
0-9, a blank space and an assortment of other characters. When the first  
space in the display is correct, press button 2, set the second character and  
repeat until the new name is complete.  
character  
As with all the other parameters, a new name composed while a USER  
program is running becomes a permanent part of the CP-1s memory as it  
is being written. If you began with a PRESET program, storing a register  
takes two more steps: Press PARAM until the display reads MEMORIZE  
PROGRAM, then press any of the 12 program keys to store all current  
settings in the corresponding USER register. This operation will also switch  
the CP-1 to the selected location in the USER bank, causing further pushes  
of the program keys to load USER programs instead of PRESETs. (Press  
BANK again to return to the factory presets.)  
Storing a Register  
1. Push PARAM to  
MEMORIZE PROGRAM  
2. Push any program # to STORE  
When a PRESET program is running and parameters have been changed,  
you can restore the original settings simply by pushing the button for the  
displayed program number again. To experiment with a USER program  
without changing it requires that you set aside one register for experiments.  
If, for example, this “scratch register” is number 12, call up the program you  
want to start with, cycle through its parameters until you come to MEMO-  
RIZE PROGRAM and press button 12. This will make a duplicate of the  
original program in USER register 12, and switch the CP-1 to USER 12. The  
parameters of the duplicate can now be modified at will and the new version  
stored in any USER register.  
Restoring Original  
Settings  
See also TEST MODE, page 17.  
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Using the  
Pro g ra m s  
Le xic o n  
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Tro ub le sho o ting  
5
C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
Troubleshooting  
If you encounter a problem, please review the items in the following  
checklist. Also be sure to thoroughly check all other connected components  
such as speakers, receiver/ amplifier/ preamp, VCR, TV, CD player, etc.  
Problem  
Possible Cause and Solution  
Input level meters not functioning  
Make sure INPUT LEVEL on the CP-1 front panel is turned up.  
Check the connections on the rear and make sure signal is going  
into the CP-1. Check SOURCE and MONITOR switches and try  
toggling them in and out.  
Make sure that the correct input is selected and that only one input  
button is depressed.  
Remote control not working  
Check the batteries and make sure that they are inserted correctly  
with proper polarity. Make sure that the infrared receiver on the  
CP-1 front panel above the POWER switch is not obstructed. If the  
remote control unit is still not functioning, RESTORE DEFAULTS  
as described below.  
No audio  
Check input and output connections. They may be reversed  
relative to the IN and OUT jacks of your receiver/ amplifier/  
preamp or other source.  
Erratic behavior  
Power turn-on with large power amps may cause power sags that  
will confuse the CP-1. To prevent this, plug the CP-1 into an AC  
outlet on a different branch circuit, or turn on one amplifier at a  
time.  
No output  
First verify that signal is coming into the CP-1 by observing the  
Input Level meters. Increase VOLUME using the Remote Control  
and check the Front/ Back and Left/ Right balances.  
Make sure that the rear panel Output Level controls are turned up.  
Check the CP-1 mute controls to make sure they are not engaged.  
Check all other equipment settings and connections and verify  
that the amplifier(s) being fed by the CP-1 are operational.  
Display irregularities  
Adjust the contrast (relative brightness) of the display using the  
procedure described on the Quick Reference Guide, and on Page  
13 of the Owner's Manual. If the display is showing strange  
characters, RESTORE DEFAULTS as describet the end of this  
section.  
Center channel only plays  
Check to see if your HiFi VCR has dropped out of tracking —  
readjust.  
Your VCR Stereo/ Mono/ L-R switch may be in the wrong posi-  
tion — set it to stereo.  
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Tro ub le sho o ting  
Le xic o n  
Problem  
Possible Cause and Solution  
Muffled sound in L&R channels  
Center channel sound muffled  
Hum  
When no center channel is used, the rear-panel phantom button  
must be pushed IN.  
The center channel amp may be connected to the subwoofer jack  
on the CP-1 rear panel. Reconnect to Center Output jack.  
Finding and eliminating audio hum in a complex installation can  
be a very frustrating task. Often, the easiest way to identify the  
culprit is to systematically eliminate devices from the audio chain.  
If Cable TV is connected to any equipment in the system, start by  
unplugging the Cable completely, preferably right at the wall  
jack. If this eliminates, or greatly reduces the hum, it's worth a call  
to your Cable company. A quick fix, assuming your cable is round  
75wire, is to attach a 75-300transformer to the end, then attach  
a 300-75transformer to that, so that the end is back to a round  
75wire. There are commercially-available antenna lead isola-  
tors which may provide additional insulation from electrical  
surges.  
Balance control doesn't work  
in Pro Logic or Stereo Logic  
If there is no center channel in the system, the center channel  
output is routed to both the left and right main outputs. This  
means the left speaker reproduces not only the left channel  
information, but also the center channel information. If you set the  
balance all the way over to the right, the left channel information  
will be attenuated, but the center channel wll still be present at the  
left speaker. In other words, it's supposed to work that way.  
Panorama Calibrate isn't working  
Panorama is an interaural crosstalk cancellation program that  
produces an anti-phase cancellation signal to the opposite  
speaker. When the calibration mode is in LEFT ONLY, there is still  
cancellation signal coming out of the right speaker. This is a  
psychoacoustic phenomenon and LEFT ONLY means the calibra-  
tion signal should appear to come only from the left (usually to the  
left of the speaker.)  
Interference with AM, FM,  
TV or Cable TV  
The CP-1 does generate minimal amounts of RF energy and is in  
compliance with FCC rules. If some interfering noise is noted,  
move AM loop and FM "T" type antennas away from the CP-1 and  
reorient them as necessary. Use shielded cable for FM and antenna  
feeds.  
Erratic recall of programs  
Severe power surges or sags can confuse the CP-1 memory. To  
correct, or if you simply want to start over, restore the factory  
defaults with the procedure described at the end of this section.  
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Tro ub le sho o ting  
C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
Problem  
Possible Cause and Solution  
Restoring defaults  
If severe power surges or sags cause problems with CP-1 memory  
storage, or you simply want to start with a clean slate in the User  
registers, you can restore factory presets into the User registers  
with the following procedure. This will erase any programs you  
have stored in the User register, so you may want to note any  
settings you wish to re-use before proceeding.  
Turn CP-1 power OFF. While pressing PARAM on the Remote  
Control, turn power ON. (Make sure your hand does not block the  
infrared receiver on the CP-1 front panel.) Continue holding  
down PARAM until the display reads:  
** TEST MODE **  
PRM Key To Exit  
Release PARAM and press EFFECT MUTE to clear and reload  
User registers, and to restore all factory settings of Volume,  
Balance, Contrast, Configuration, etc. The display will read:  
RESTORE DEFAULTS  
Press PARAM to restore normal operation. (Remember to check  
the LCD contrast and Configuration settings, since they will have  
been reset to factory defaults.)  
If you cannot solve functional problems through these proce-  
dures, consult your dealer or Lexicon/ Customer Service Depart-  
ment.DO NOT, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES, OPEN THE  
UNIT. DOING SO WILL VOID YOUR WARRANTY, AND  
MODIFICATIONS MAY RENDER THE UNIT UNSERVICE-  
ABLE.  
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Tro ub le sho o ting  
Le xic o n  
Pa g e 34  
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The o ry  
a nd  
De sig n  
6
C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
Lateral Sound  
Concert Hall Acoustics  
For decades the study of concert-hall acoustics relied on certain basic  
measurements to characterize halls, the main one being the time it takes a  
sound to drop in level (decay) by 60 decibels. This is called the reverberation  
time or RT and is approximately the same as the time it takes a hand clap  
to subside 6t0o inaudibility. The RT60 is measured as a function of frequency,  
usually in bands one octave wide, over the range of audible frequencies. The  
resulting curve forms a frequency contour for the hall.  
While it was found that most good halls have comparable RT60 curves,  
different halls with similar RT60 measurements can sound very different  
from each other and listener reactions to them can vary widely. Clearly,  
other important factors in the sound field were not being measured.  
Through the work of many people (including Manfred Schroeder, A. H.  
Marshall, Michael Barron and others) some of these factors were identified.  
In an effort to answer the question of why some halls sound so much better  
than others, Schroeder devised a method for comparing them without  
transporting his subjects from hall to hall. Using a dummy head with  
microphone diaphragms in place of ear drums, Schroeder made binaural  
recordings in many halls. These recordings, played back through ear-  
phones, gave excellent reproduction of spatial qualities. Unfortunately, the  
stereo image tended to appear entirely inside the head, spoiling the accu-  
racy of such recordings as a test of concert halls.  
To overcome this problem, Schroeder played his recordings through a pair  
of loudspeakers in an anechoic chamber, using a special electro-acoustic  
technique (developed by Atal, Schroeder, Damaske and Mellert) to elimi-  
nate crosstalk between the listeners ears. Normally each speaker is heard  
by both ears but Schroeders system canceled the sound reaching the right  
ear from the left speaker and vice-versa. Provided that the listener held his  
head in exactly the right spot, the sound had all the excellent localization  
properties of earphones but was properly located outside the listeners  
head.  
This technique allowed the first direct comparisons of specific halls.1 From  
these studies it was found that the best halls were all characterized by  
having large differences in the sound between the two ears in the dummy  
head. Very simply, the best halls gave the most stereo.  
Michael Barron defined this characteristic in halls as Spatial Impression (SI)  
and found that it was created by sideways-moving reflected sound.2 Only  
reflections which move from side to side produce SI, because only they give  
rise to sound differences between the two ears. Reflections from the front,  
ceiling, floor or back wall add loudness and muddiness to the sound but it  
is the lateral reflections that draw the listener into the music.  
Halls with similar RT60 sound very  
different. The best have large  
amounts of sideways moving re-  
flected sound.  
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The o ry  
a nd  
De sig n  
Le xic o n  
Understanding the importance of lateral reflections enabled more accurate  
evaluation of architectural acoustics. The best halls were usually found to  
have high lateral energy for obvious architectural reasons, such as a long  
narrow shape with high ceilings. Fan-shaped halls, although they have  
better sight lines, are more adaptible to multiple uses and hold a greater  
number of seats for their total volume than a shoe-box hall, tend to have  
fewer attractive, sideways reflections and more of the unpleasant, monau-  
ral overhead and rear-wall kind. These differences can be overcome by  
design. A notable example is the Boston Symphonys fan-shaped Tangle-  
wood music shed. Tanglewood sounds good because the reflectors above  
and in front of the orchestra (known as clouds) have angled sides that reflect  
energy sideways onto the audience instead of just downward.  
}
Side sound must be within this angle.  
Sound from the side is vital to lis-  
tener comfort and involvement....It  
must really be from the side!  
Lateral Sound in your Listening Environment  
In an ordinary listening room, conventional stereo set-ups (with loudspeak-  
ers separated by 60 degrees or less) do not excite enough SI to sound  
pleasant without some help from the room. (A similar speaker arrangement  
in the artificial environment of an anechoic chamber is exceedingly detailed  
and precise, but unpleasant.) Some lateral reflections are needed to make  
the sound musical.  
No Sound  
Ordinary two-speaker stereo works as well as it does because sideways-  
moving reflections can be excited at low frequencies by two loudspeakers  
if they are placed asymmetrically in the room or if they are driven with out-  
of-phase low-frequency information.3,4 (Out-of-phase bass is intentionally  
provided in the best stereo recordings.) Another reason is that most  
listening rooms have reflective surfaces to the sides of the listener. A  
popular listening room treatment puts absorptive material at the front of the  
room, leaving the walls by the listener reflective. This improves the clarity  
by removing the front reflections, while retaining those from the side. This  
also explains the appeal of loudspeakers that produce lots of sideways-  
reflected energy.  
In an anechoic chamber, this side-  
ways sound is missing...and music  
sounds unpleasant.  
Unfortunately, in most two-speaker set-ups the mid- and high-frequency  
lateral sound is reduced unless the speakers are unusually widely placed.  
The listener can hear a little of the original hall, stretched between the stereo  
loudspeakers, but never really becomes a part of it. What is worse, the  
lateral sound that exists in most playback rooms has so little delay that the  
ear can not separate it from the direct sound. The reflections generate some  
SI but they also cause coloration and muddiness. Small rooms usually  
sound better if these reflections are broken up (with wall hangings, furni-  
ture or bookcases) or absorbed (with curtains or sound-absorbent panels).  
When this is done the room becomes quieter and clearer but not in any way  
like the original hall.  
In an ordinary room, the room sup-  
plies these directions, and the sound  
is cramped, but tolerable. The overall  
impression, however, may be muddy  
due to unwanted frontal reflections.  
The Lexicon CP-1 resolves this deficiency by supplying appropriate signals  
to loudspeakers at the sides of the listener or by modifying signals to the  
main loudspeakers to fool the ear into thinking there are loudspeakers at the  
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sides. Both methods depend on having the added sound come from a  
different direction than the original music, and each method has some  
advantages. With either method of generating SI there is an additional  
choice the CP-1 allows the user to make: the sideways energy cues of the  
original recording can be extracted by the CP-1, or a different hall sound can  
be generated and supplied from the correct directions.  
Ambience Extraction  
The Panorama and Surround programs in the CP-1 extract the original  
acoustic cues from the recording and present them to the listener from the  
correct directions. We call this ambience extraction. The three Panorama  
programs can even do this with only two loudspeakers. Panorama uses  
crosstalk elimination to fool the ear into thinking there is a continuous band  
of loudspeakers extending all the way to the sides of the listener and also  
supplies a delayed and filtered L-R signal to rear speakers. On a good  
recording this successfully recreates the original recording space, although  
the ideal listening area may be small.  
The confusing frontal reflections can  
be absorbed leaving the essential lat-  
eral ones. This is better, but not ideal.  
The Surround programs, Stereo Logic and Pro logic, also work by ambience  
extraction. They divide the front energy among three or more loudspeakers  
and supply a delayed and filtered difference signal to rear loudspeakers.  
Because a center speaker is provided, the left and right speakers can be  
placed far enough to the sides of the listener to directly excite significant SI  
and the resulting image is wide but seamless. This set-up can sound similar  
to Panorama, and it works over a large listening area.  
Stereo Logic and Pro Logic also provide steering. Steering works by  
enhancing the directionality of the loudest sound in a mix; it steers the  
sound out of loudspeakers where it is not needed and into the ones closest  
to its direction in the image. In popular music the loudest sound is usually  
the vocals, which will be preferentially steered toward the center loud-  
speaker. Some steering is frequently beneficial to music recordings played  
with a surround speaker arrangement, and it is essential for films.  
Ambience Generation  
The Reverb and Ambience programs in the CP-1 synthesize the side and  
rear sound of several different acoustic spaces. Rather than extracting the  
acoustic cues of the original hall from the recording, they generate a new  
environment, effectively enlarging and improving the acoustics of your  
listening room. In these programs the original stereo channels are pre-  
sented unaltered to the main loudspeakers, and new signals are generated  
for the side and rear loudspeakers. Both Ambience and Reverb can be  
configured to use a version of Panorama to generate the correct side sound  
even when side loudspeakers are absent. In this mode the side signals are first  
passed through Panorama before being mixed into the main loudspeakers,  
so the resulting hall sound is perceived as coming from the side and is well  
separated from the original sound.  
With the CP-1, confusing short re-  
flections can be absorbed; the CP-1  
will supply the essential lateral  
sound - which can simulate a much  
larger space.The more absorbent the  
playback room, the better it will  
sound, and the closer it will sound to  
a real hall, or larger environment.  
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The Panorama  
Program  
Loudspeakers placed on either side of the listening position are the most  
effective and foolproof way to produce added Spatial Impression. Since it  
is not always possible to have side loudspeakers, the CP-1 uses crosstalk  
elimination to simulate them when they cant physically be there. In  
Panorama the front speakers are driven entirely by the front digital outputs  
of the CP-1. (Panorama disables any side speakers present, and simulates  
them electronically.)  
Versions of the Atal/ Schroeder/ Damaske/ Mellert technique mentioned  
earlier have appeared in several consumer signal processors under various  
trade names, as well as in a line of loudspeakers that achieved a similar effect  
acoustically. These have all been what we call “first-order” devices. To see  
what this means, imagine there is a sound coming from the left channel only.  
This sound will travel to the left ear of the listener, then diffract around the  
listeners head and be heard by the right ear. If we take the left-channel  
sound, delay it just the right amount, invert it in phase and feed it to the right  
speaker, it will arrive at the right ear just in time to cancel the crosstalk from  
Speaker  
Level  
L
Speaker  
Level  
R
Input  
First order  
Correction  
Sound  
Imagine a click in the left speaker...  
to  
to + t  
to  
R
L
Sound from speaker L travels to the  
left ear and also to the right ear, a  
time t later.  
If we supply a negative delayed sig-  
nal to the right speaker, this crosstalk  
can be canceled.  
L
R
the left speaker.  
The main problem with a first-order device is that the subtracting signal is  
also heard by the opposite ear. In our example, the canceling signal from the  
right loudspeaker will diffract around the head to the left ear, interfering  
with the left-speaker sound and producing a “comb filter” which colors the  
sound in an obvious and unpleasant way. Furthermore, the listeners head  
is not well represented by a simple delay line. Both the delay and the  
amplitude of the opposite-ear sound vary in complicated ways with fre-  
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quency.  
Lexicon’s implementation, called the Panorama program, was designed  
using measured data on sound diffraction around the head to shape the  
frequency spectrum of the canceling signal. This signal is then itself  
canceled by a second signal, and so on, so that both the crosstalk and the  
Input  
Higher order  
Correction  
Speaker  
Level  
L
Speaker  
Level  
R
Signal  
First order  
Higher order  
L
R
First order correction travels to left  
ear, where it will be heard unless  
canceled by an additional correction.  
When these higher order corrections  
are supplied, accurate cancellation is  
possible.  
L
R
signal that is canceling it are eliminated.  
This works extremely well when the room is well damped and the listeners  
head is correctly positioned. The first order devices described earlier  
required the listener to sit on the center line between the loudspeakers, and  
to arrange the angle between the speakers to correspond to the pro-  
grammed delay. Although the CP-1 provides adjustments to compensate  
for off-center listening and for varying speaker angles, maintaining a  
consistent listening position is still important and becomes more so with  
increasing frequency. With wide speaker angles, a movement of as little as  
1 inch can make a perceptible difference. Fortunately, the effect is usually  
fairly good everywhere within a zone about one foot wide.  
To achieve the fullest Panorama effect, your main loudspeakers should  
have good imaging. The smaller speakers that tend to be used with video  
systems may have an inherent advantage here but the most important  
requirement is that the two speakers have identical frequency response and  
symmetrical dispersion. It is not necessary, or desirable, to turn your  
listening room into an anechoic chamber but moving the speakers away  
from the walls can be helpful, as can adding absorption (as provided by  
carpets, curtains and/ or sound-absorbent panels) to reduce the reflectivity  
of the floor, walls and ceiling.  
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In a well-damped room with loudspeakers mounted on stands away from  
the walls, the Panorama effect can be very exciting, giving the closest  
possible approximation to the actual hall used for the recording. With true  
binaural recordings (made with a modern dummy head with accurate  
external ears and proper equalization) the playback can be uncannily  
realistic. And, unlike previous versions of this technique, the Panorama  
program adds virtually no coloration to the original signal.  
Panorama is used in two ways in the CP-1. First, there are the three  
Panorama programs, designed to reproduce as closely as possible the  
sound actually recorded by the engineer. If the recording has good natural  
ambience, Panorama will spread that ambience around the listener, giving  
a true impression of the original hall.  
The Normal and Wide versions of the Panorama program differ primarily  
in their handling of low-frequency signals. Normal is designed for record-  
ings whose bass energy is evenly distributed across the stereo stage; Wide  
is designed for recordings with centered bass. The only other difference  
between these two programs is in their initial Effect Level. If you need more  
bass from Panorama Normal, use Wide and reduce the Effect Level.  
Conversely, if Panorama Wide is too bass-heavy, use Normal and increase  
the Effect Level.  
Panorama can be used with music,  
films, or from within the Reverb and  
Ambience programs to simulate side  
speakers if the listener is inside the  
effective area between loudspeakers.  
The Low Frequency Width control provides another important adjustment  
to the bass in Panorama. This control is a simple implementation of a Spatial  
Equalizer (a function which Alan Blumlein referred to as a “shuffler”). One  
of the ways ordinary stereo excites SI is through the out-of-phase low  
frequency energy in the recording. The Low Frequency Width control  
allows the amount of out-of-phase bass in a recording to be adjusted. Even  
when the Effect level of the Panorama control is all the way down, the Low  
Frequency Width control is active, allowing the user to experiment with this  
property of sound.  
Recording engineers have only recently become aware of Spatial Equaliza-  
tion3,4 and many older recordings are greatly improved by increasing the  
low frequency width a little. When the rest of the Panorama program is not  
used (by turning down the Effect control) just turning LF Width up a bit can  
make ordinary recordings quite spacious. The user should exercise caution,  
however, since some recordings (such as those on Telarc) use microphone  
techniques which already contain sufficient out-of-phase low frequency  
energy.  
The crosstalk cancellation in Panorama increases the low frequency width  
as well as the high frequency width of a recording. Recordings in which the  
engineer deliberately added large amounts of low frequency width will  
sound too wide and phasey when played with either Panorama Normal or  
Panorama Wide. Negative values of the Low Frequency Width parameter  
can bring the low frequencies back in line with the higher frequencies and  
make the playback with Panorama more effective. The Binaural setting of  
When the front speakers are close  
together, the Panorama Effect is less  
precise but more dramatic, and it  
works over a larger area.  
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Panorama greatly increases low frequency width and should only be used  
with true binaural recordings, which have very little out-of-phase low  
frequency energy. A few compatible binaural recordings are becoming  
available, in which the low frequency width has been increased to match the  
requirements of loudspeaker playback. These recordings may sound best  
when played with the Normal setting.  
Panorama is capable of simulating side loudspeakers effectively, but cannot  
mimic sound sources to the rear of the listener. So we have added a simple  
delayed Left minus Right signal which can be sent to rear loudspeakers.  
The delay is adjustable, as is the treble rolloff.  
For a listener in the ideal position, Panorama, with one or two rear speakers,  
gives a nearly ideal re-creation of the original recording area.  
Panorama is also used as an element in the Ambience and Reverberation  
programs, where it can synthesize side loudspeakers which are not present  
in the installation. In this mode the stereo inputs to the CP-1 are fed directly  
to the front loudspeakers, with the digital outputs of the CP-1 mixed in  
according to the setting of the Effect Level control. The Ambience or Reverb  
side outputs are sent through Panorama before being mixed into the front  
loudspeakers, so the added sound spreads beyond them and does not  
interfere with the original material. When side speakers are present, the  
Panorama Effect parameter is automatically turned down and no mixing  
occurs into the front speakers.  
Speaker alignment is important. A  
6" difference in the distance to the  
rear wall can greatly change the ef-  
fective area, unless compensated for  
by the LISTENER POS parameter.  
The Ambience  
Program  
While the Panorama program recreates the space that already exists in the  
recording, the Ambience program actually generates the side and rear  
reflection patterns of a number of ideal concert halls. The reflections were  
determined by computer ray-tracing using architectural data, augmented  
by Lexicon’s 15 years of experience with digital concert-hall simulation.  
The Ambience simulation is done in stereo. Instead of feeding combined left  
and right channels to the processor, the CP-1 has two input points corre-  
sponding to instruments placed on the left or right side of the stage. From  
these the computer calculates the loudness and delay of the reflections for  
the side and rear loudspeakers.  
Ambience generates primarily the strong reflections which appear early in  
the reverberation process (in the first few hundred milliseconds). Although  
some reverberant decay can be added with the Liveness parameter, the  
early reflections constitute the primary audible effect, giving you the  
impression of the hall surrounding you while the music is playing. As in  
actual concert halls, the most important contribution to spatial realism will  
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be the sound that comes from the sides.  
Early research with quadraphonics involved extensive experimentation  
with speaker placement, and confirmed that additional speakers beside the  
listener sounded better than the conventional approach of putting pairs of  
speakers in front and behind. Our research into speaker placement with  
Ambience confirmed the previous results of others: The side speakers  
should be directly to the side of the main listening position, plus or minus  
about 20 degrees. Beyond this critical angle the spatial impression is greatly  
reduced.  
The sides are the most important additional speakers, much more so than  
the rears. Keep in mind that, although you can use the left and right main  
speakers to simulate a phantom center speaker, you cannot produce SI with  
one speaker in the front and one at the rear . (You can perform this  
experiment for yourself with the CP-1 using the Ambience program: Try the  
side speakers both in their usual positions and in the front corners. If your  
listening room has enough absorption to damp its side-wall reflections, the  
side location will provide much more spatial impression, and will sound  
substantially better.) Speakers in the front are useful - if you want the best  
possible sound from Ambience you may want to try an additional pair in the  
front corners, wired in parallel with the rear. This additional pair, as well as  
the rear speakers, may sound best if placed above the listener.  
The best way to generate spatial im-  
pression (SI) is with appropriate sig-  
nals from loudspeakers at the side.  
Reverb, Ambience and the Surround  
programs can all be used to generate  
these signals.  
The effectiveness of the CP-1’s Ambience simulation is heavily dependent  
on the source material and the playback room. If the playback room is large  
and reverberant, its reflections may dominate those generated by the  
program. Carpet, drapes and furniture can all be used to break up or absorb  
undesirable reflections, making it easier to hear the processors output. The  
balance between the side, rear and front speakers is also very important. If  
the channels are set up properly, no single speaker will be audible by itself.  
A
B
There are two basic hall shapes in Ambience: Rectangular and Fan. In a  
listening room with sufficient acoustical absorption, using source material  
without too much reverberation of its own, the two shapes are clearly  
distinguishable. For most classical recordings the rectangular hall sounds  
somewhat better because of its stronger side reflections. In our fan-shaped  
hall (unlike actual physical designs) you can increase the proportion of side  
to rear sounds, by increasing the Effect Level and shifting the F/ B Balance  
controls toward the front. When this is done, another different but also  
pleasant sound results.  
Although the Ambience program can provide some recirculation (adjust-  
able with the Liveness parameter), for long decay times it is better to use  
Reverb. The Large Hall ambiences are not intended to be used on material  
which is more appropriate to a smaller ambience, such as a small hall or a  
club. Highly percussive material is almost always better in the Small  
program which is quite successful in livening and expanding popular  
Placement of side loudspeakers is  
critical! Placement B sounds much  
better than A, especially when the  
room is well damped.  
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music.  
If you have no side loudspeakers, both Ambience and Reverb contain  
versions of the Panorama program that will simulate them within a narrow  
area between the speakers. Choosing one of the speaker configurations  
with no side speakers (see page 13) will automatically turn the Panorama  
Effect on and mix the side outputs into the main outputs. (If you have a set-  
up with six or more loudspeakers, you may want to try setting the configu-  
ration for no side speakers. This will still turn on Panorama and mix the  
sides to the front, while leaving the side outputs on.)  
The Reverb  
Program  
While the Ambience program simulates the early reflections of real halls,  
Reverberation is more concerned with what happens to the sound after the  
first hundred milliseconds or so. The first reflections are not intended to  
simulate any particular hall and no real shape will be audible.  
The Reverb program produces a rapidly increasing echo density that  
smooths out impulsive sounds. The decay in this program is unusually  
smooth and natural and can create the effect of a church or a very reverber-  
ant hall. The early sideways reflections, which produce the most SI, are  
weaker than they are in the Ambience program. In Reverb, as in Ambience,  
the stereo input is fed directly to the front loudspeakers. Some of the side  
energy can also be fed to the front speakers; side and rear outputs are  
generated from the stereo input.  
For the largest possible effect from the Reverb programs, consider placing  
speakers in the front corners of the room and driving them in parallel with  
the rear speakers. Note, however, that this configuration does not compen-  
sate for the absence of side speakers, which continue to be the most  
important.  
Direction is critical to maintaining clarity in Reverb and Ambience. The  
recording engineer has probably put as much reverberation in the record-  
ing as the music can withstand. Adding more through speakers located in  
front of the listener is generally not a good idea, since these effects combine  
with the sound from the front speakers, making the music muddy. Delay  
and reverb in the rear can occasionally be helpful but the ear is not  
particularly good at distinguishing between front and rear sounds and, as  
with Ambience, it is at the sides that Reverb is most needed.  
If you have no side loudspeakers, both Ambience and Reverb contain  
versions of the Panorama program that will simulate them within a narrow  
area between the speakers . Choosing one of the speaker configurations  
with no side speakers (see page 13) will automatically turn the Panorama  
Effect on and mix the side outputs into the main outputs. (If you have a set-  
up with six or more loudspeakers, you may want to try setting the configu-  
ration for no side speakers. This will still turn on Panorama and mix the  
Reverb is very good for simulating a  
large reverberant space.  
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The Surround  
Programs  
sides to the front, while leaving the side outputs on.)  
The Surround programs: Mono Logic, Stereo Logic and Pro Logic, are  
specifically designed for film sound or for systems set up primarily for  
Mono Logic  
enhanced film viewing.  
Mono Logic is a stereo conversion program for monaural film sound tracks.  
A quick look through any video rental selection will prove the usefulness of  
such a program; the vast majority of titles are mono.  
The problem of mono-to-stereo conversion is an old one. One time-honored  
solution is to break the incoming signal into frequency bands, sending some  
to one channel and the rest to the other. When the filters are complementary  
(when the sum of the two output channels equals the original input channel)  
this solution can give stereo spread without ruining the tonal balance. When  
the filters are non-complementary, they can produce an unpleasant fake  
stereo effect.  
Some effort has been made to design filter pairs for film sound which leave  
voice frequencies unchanged while spreading out the music. More recent  
designs have gone in another direction, using digital or analog delay lines  
to produce a comb filter effect. So far, these attempts have not been very  
successful.  
The principal element of film sound is dialog and the principal rule in  
reproducing it is to assure that it appears exclusively in the center channel.  
Broadcasters, who have an interest in converting mixtures of dialog and  
music to synthesized stereo, have built circuits designed to turn off the  
stereo synthesizer when voice appears. Unfortunately, the switch from  
mono to stereo is often abrupt and the chances of dropping into mono by  
mistake during music are high. One basic problem with films, especially  
modern ones, is that music or background effects which should be spread  
out into the side speakers frequently appear at a low level beneath the  
dialog.  
The Mono Logic program electronically identifies certain properties of film  
speech and removes it from the stereo synthesis. This allows music and  
effects in the dialog to be spread out while leaving the dialog centered. The  
remaining music and effects are directed to the input of a room simulation  
program that creates a space the size of a large room or small theater. The  
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room simulator has outputs for left, right, side and rear surround speakers.  
The monaural input sound from the film is unchanged in the center  
speaker, so that all the dialog and music that the director expected to come  
from the screen still does, with no modification or reverb. Partly because of  
the acoustical character of the room synthesizer, the result is often so  
successful that switching from a monaural input with Mono Logic to a  
stereo input with Pro Logic may make a surprisingly small difference.  
During the early days of film ste-  
reo, dialog was sometimes mixed  
(by “panning” the monaural dia-  
log track) to come from the same  
part of the screen as the image of the  
actor. Subjective reactions to this  
technique were varied, and techni-  
cal problems with some magnetic  
sound tracks helped to discourage  
the practice, so modern movies are  
seldom mixed with panned dialog.  
In a home system with a good Pro  
Logic decoder, however, the effect  
can work quite well; recent releases  
with panned dialog include “Yel-  
low Submarine” and “Superman  
I”. In most films, though, all dialog  
comes from the center channel.  
The most critical adjustment in Mono Logic is the Effect Level. Ideally the  
films music and effects should appear to come from the front but with the  
added sense of a large space surrounding you. The side and rear speakers  
should not be individually audible.  
Mono Logic works with the left input channel only. If it is used with a stereo  
Pro Logic  
input, material recorded exclusively in the right channel will be ignored.  
The CP-1 is one of a few consumer products to offer full Pro Logic Dolby  
Surround decoding, and it is the only one that operates entirely in the digital  
domain. This has important advantages, but to understand them we must  
first take a brief look at how a film soundtrack is put together.  
A Dolby Stereo film sound track has four basic components: Left and right  
channels, a center front channel and a surround channel. The first three are  
fed to speakers arrayed behind the movie screen, while the surround sound  
goes to speakers on the side and rear walls of the theater. The four channels  
are recorded on separate magnetic tracks and are combined by the Dolby  
Stereo matrix encoder into two stereo channels during the final mixing  
process. The original left and right channels go directly onto the left and  
right channels of the Dolby Stereo mix. The center channel is fed equally to  
both channels, in phase, and the surround track is fed equally to both  
channels, but 180 degrees out of phase.  
The center channel carries the dialog; music is normally mixed so that it  
appears to come from the front, with reverberation or ambience coming  
from the surrounds. For special effects, music can be encoded to come from  
all around the listener or even from behind. In any case, with music and  
ambient effects there is always substantial spread across the front of the  
loudspeaker array.  
Films originally have four channels:  
one for dialog and three for music  
and effects. To make a Dolby Stereo  
film, these are combined to two.  
Sound effects can come from any direction around the listener and it is the  
job of the decoder to duplicate as closely as possible the film mixers  
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placements.  
Dolby Surround Decoding  
When the movie is shown the two Dolby Stereo tracks must be decoded and  
separated into the original four. The Dolby Surround decoder does this in  
a rather rudimentary way: it supplies a signal to the center channel which  
is just the sum of the two input channels. This signal contains the dialog.  
However, the left and right signals still contain dialog too, so the dialog is  
spread out among the three front speakers. Similarly, the Dolby Surround  
decoder takes all out-of-phase signals and sends them to the surround  
speakers, while leaving the original out-of-phase components in the left and  
right front speakers.  
The basic Dolby Surround decoder has high channel separation between  
left and right decoded audio, and between center and surround. The  
separation between left or right and center, or between left or right and  
surround, however, is only a few dB. The simple Dolby Surround decoder  
does pretty well with music (although sometimes the center channel is too  
loud) but, because any sound will be reproduced in at least three loud-  
With conventional surround any  
sound comes from at least three direc-  
tions.  
speakers, effects are smeared and often unconvincing .  
Pro Logic Decoding  
A Pro Logic decoder, like the professional Dolby Stereo cinema processor,  
both enhances the dialog in the center and removes it from the left and right,  
while maintaining as much stereo separation as possible. This is a form of  
directional steering. Properly done, steering prevents the dialog from  
appearing in the other channels and enhances its plausibility.  
The situation is similar with music and sound effects. For example, if the  
sound was intended to be in the left, the decoder will remove it from the  
center and surround channels. If it was intended to be halfway between left  
and center, the Pro Logic decoder presents it equally to the left and center  
speakers and removes it from the right and surround channels.  
The Pro Logic decoder can give good stereo spread and precise control over  
front-to-back perspective. But the real strength of Pro Logic decoding  
emerges when music and dialog occur at the same time. When dialog is  
present, the center channel information must be removed from the left and  
right channels without reducing the spread or loudness of the music.  
Simple logic decoders turn down the  
left and right speakers during dialog.  
This seriously affects music and ef-  
fects.  
Pro Logic decoders sense both the direction of the loudest sound and the  
difference in level between it and any ambient information. They then use  
this information to direct the steering. The accuracy with which this is done  
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is even more important in a home decoder than in a professional model,  
because the small size of the playback room makes decoding errors more  
audible than they are in a theater. The level detection must be very fast, and  
the matrix must adapt very quickly or there will be a time lag between the  
audibility of a sound and its correct steering. Since phase relationships  
determine how the sound is steered, Pro Logic decoding puts unusual  
demands on the accuracy of the phase and balance of the input channels.  
Other Pro-Logic decoders have a front panel control for adjusting input  
balance and for best results a user should carefully adjust this for each  
program. But what if the channel balance varies during playback?  
The manual balancing procedure does nothing to correct azimuth errors.  
During the preparation of the master for a video tape or disc, misalignment  
of the playback heads or skewing of the film produce small time differences  
between the two channels. Azimuth is poorly controlled in both profes-  
sional video recorders and optical film chains. In the final product, which  
has been through many generations, it can easily be wrong by 50 microsec-  
onds or more, and may vary as the tape or disk is played. At middle and  
high frequencies it doesnt take much misalignment to generate large inter-  
channel differences in phase, which are just what the decoder uses to do its  
steering.  
Pro Logic decoders remove dialog  
from the left and right channels,  
while maintaining stereo as much as  
possible.  
Other Dolby Pro Logic decoders try to deal with this problem by reducing  
the treble in the surround, so the out-of-phase sibilants in the film do not  
splatter annoyingly from the rear. This does not, however, reduce the  
sibilants in the side speakers. Some non-Pro Logic decoders reduce these  
side-channel sibilants by narrowing the spread of the front channels in the  
presence of dialog; this compromise is unnecessary in the CP-1.  
The CP-1 Decoder  
The CP-1 decoder is unusual in a number of ways. First of all, it is entirely  
digital. (Most surround decoders advertise that they are digital because  
there is a digital delay line for the surround channel but the matrix and the  
logic decoding are done in analog.)  
Because the CP-1 is all digital, we can use some of the digital memory to  
delay all the output channels by 20 milliseconds — about the same as the  
acoustic delay you get in the front row of a theater. (The surround channel  
is delayed by an additional 16 to 32 milliseconds.) This delay allows plenty  
of time for the CP-1 to determine the direction of sounds and adjust the  
matrix before the sounds are sent to the amplifiers. This substantially  
improves dialog and effects cancellation, as is immediately apparent from  
the spread of ambient material or music, even in the presence of dialog.  
Pro Logic requires phase accuracy.  
Common azimuth errors cause ghost  
dialog in all channels unless the azi-  
muth error is corrected.  
The CP-1 can also sense and continuously correct both balance and azimuth  
errors in the incoming material. All the time the film is playing, the CP-1 is  
checking balance and azimuth, keeping the dialog perfectly centered. The  
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result is superior steering. An added benefit is that the CP-1 is the only Pro  
Logic decoder which needs no front panel input balance control; the user  
need not bother with this adjustment. You can check the quality of the  
balance and azimuth in a tape or disc if you wish by turning the Auto  
Azimuth/ Balance parameter off and observing any changes in the location  
of dialog and effects.  
In addition, because the side and rear cancellation of dialog is unusually  
good even with poor material, you can use Stereo Logic to set the rear  
channel filtering higher than is recommended in the Pro Logic specifica-  
tions. This added surround brilliance makes some effects, such as falling  
rain all around you or objects zooming from rear to front, much more  
convincing. This feature should be used with caution, however, since in this  
mode the decoder is different from the one on which the film was mixed.  
Stereo Logic  
The Stereo Logic program is primarily designed for the playback of music  
through film-sound systems. Its basic structure is similar to Pro Logic but  
it contains more variable parameters. In the Preset version of Stereo Logic  
these parameters are set for music but they can be changed to produce a  
versatile program for film sound as well.  
The range of the Rear Delay parameter is 0-32 ms, as opposed to 16-32 ms  
in Pro Logic, for use with music programs in which you may want to hear  
the front and rear outputs of the program simultaneously.  
Music does not necessarily contain a crucial, centrally located element  
analogous to the dialog in films. So the Preset version of Stereo Logic has  
no automatic adjustment for interchannel time delay and balance (that is,  
the Auto Azimuth/ Balance parameter is off). The Front Effect parameter,  
which controls the steering among the front three channels, is preset half  
way up, meaning that centrally located sounds are diminished by 6 dB in the  
side speakers and vice-versa. The setting for Dolby Stereo films is 16 (up all  
the way).  
The Rear Effect parameter controls the steering of effects, music and  
ambient sounds to the rear speakers. Its preset value is determined by the  
speaker configuration specified by the user. (See page 13.) The preset value  
is zero if there are no rear speakers in your system and 8 (of a possible 16)  
when there are rear speakers. When the Rear Effect is set to zero all rear  
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sounds appear in the front left and right speakers (and the side left and right  
speakers, if present).  
The Rear Noise Chip parameter is preset to OFF, meaning that the high-  
frequency sound in the rear channels is set solely by the Rear Rolloff  
parameter. (The Rear Noise Chip should be ON for Dolby Surround  
programs.) Rear Rolloff is preset to 14.1 kHz, its highest constant value. An  
Automatic mode expands to accommodate signals steered to the rear, then  
shuts down to 7 kHz for lower percussion leakage when there are no signals  
there. This is a useful feature for films.  
The Stereo Logic Program can provide an unusual and revealing way to  
listen to music. With a multi-speaker surround system the program puts  
you in the middle of the music, so that interior elements formerly buried in  
the mix become audible. Try setting Front Effect and Rear Effect all the way  
up; then mute the center channel by pushing System Mute to turn main and  
effects signals off, then Effects Mute to turn everything but the center back  
on. This allows you to hear all of the mix (except for strongly centered  
Speaker Set-Ups for Pro Logic  
material such as vocals) separated and spread throughout the room. This  
method also provides an interesting look into the details of film sound  
mixes.  
The requirements for film sound are quite different from those for the  
playback of music. The most important track in any film is the dialog. When  
the two stereo channels are played back through two speakers with no  
decoder, dialog will appear to come more or less from the center, but only  
for those listeners on the center line of the main stereo pair.  
The most important job for a Pro Logic decoder is canceling the dialog from  
left and right loudspeakers. To be able to hear this you have to set up a center  
speaker. We strongly recommend that a center channel speaker be used  
with any surround decoder; the difference it can make to the subjective  
quality of a film is enormous.  
Assuming some form of center speaker has been provided, the next most  
important point is providing enough spatial impression. Once again, the  
best way to do this is with loudspeakers at the sides of the listeners. When  
we tried this with the CP-1 we made an interesting discovery. When the Left  
and Right loudspeakers are spread wide enough to fall within 20 degrees of  
the listeners' sides, there is a tremendous change in the impact of the film.  
The sound stage becomes much wider than the screen - so wide in fact that  
the listener is literally drawn into the action. This effect should not be  
surprising - lateral sound is known to grab our attention in a way that front  
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sound does not. Occasional extra wide sound effects can seem peculiar at  
first for being so much wider than the screen but when the mix is good the  
emotional impact of the wide sound can be very great. The disparity  
between the size of the video screen and the size of the sound is usually easy  
to accept, and the added impact is hard to give up once you have heard it.  
A few theaters are beginning to wake up to the power of this effect. It is being  
used presently and has been used in the past. Some theaters, such as Imax  
and Omnimax, use it routinely with multi-track masters, and older tech-  
niques such as Todd-AO had wonderful multichannel soundsystems.  
The major reason standard theaters do not use this is the poor accuracy of  
previous surround decoders when used with commercially available stereo  
prints. Azimuth errors on both optical and magnetic masters are common  
and in theaters there can often be considerable dialog leakage into the left  
and right channels. To increase the seating area with acceptable dialog,  
theaters place the left and right speakers within the confines of the screen.  
The needed spatial impression is supplied by the acoustics of the theater  
itself, augmented by surround speakers placed all around the audience. The  
surround speakers are driven in parallel from the surround channel output  
of the decoder.  
The CP-1 can be used to create a similar set-up in the home by connecting  
the side speakers to the rear amplifiers. However, our experiments indicate  
that most people find this far from optimal. The use of auto azimuth, auto  
balance and digital steering make the CP-1 superior to any other surround  
decoder, including the professional decoder for theaters. This allows us to  
remove the dialog completely and feed the left and right signals (not the  
surround) to the side speakers. When side speakers are present this is a  
marvelous solution. (See speaker configurations 10 and 11, page 13.) Much  
the same effect as separate side loudspeakers can be provided by simply  
placing the main loudspeakers near the sides of the listeners and using the  
center loudspeaker to fill in the middle of the front image.  
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References  
1. Schroeder, M.R., Gottlob, D. and Siebrasse, K.F.,"Comparative Study of  
European Concert Halls: Correlation of Subjective Preference with Geo-  
metric and Acoustic Parameters", J. Acoust. Soc. Am., vol. 56, pp. 1195-1204  
(1974).  
2. Barron, M., and A.H. Marshall, "Spatial Impression Due to Early Lateral  
Reflections in Concert Halls: The Derivation of a Physical Measure",J. Sound  
Vibration, vol. 77, pp. 211, 232 (1981).  
3. Griesinger, D., "Spaciousness and Localization in Listening Rooms and  
Their Effects on the Recording Technique", J. of the Audio Eng. Soc., vol. 34  
no. 4, pp. 255-268 (1986).  
4. Griesinger, D., "New Perspectives on Coincident and Semi Coincident  
Microphone Arrays", J. of the Audio Eng. Soc., 82nd Convention, Lon-  
don(1987) Preprint # 2464 (H-4).  
5. Damaske and Mellert, "Ein Verfahren zur richtungstreuen Schallab-  
bildung des oberen Halbraumes über zwei Lautsprecher", Acustica, vol. 22,  
pp. 153-162 (1969/ 70)  
6. Bishnu S. Atal and Manfred R. Schroeder, "Apparent Sound Source  
Translator" - U.S. Patent Disclosure, Patent No. 3,236,949, Feb. 22, 1966.  
7. Borish, J., "An Auditorium Simulator for Domestic Use", J. of the Audio  
Eng. Soc., 33 (5) p. 330 (1985).  
8. Blumlein, A.D., British Patent 394,325, 14 June, 1933, reprinted inJ. of the  
Audio Eng. Soc., Vol. 6, pp. 91-98, 130 (April, 1958).  
9. Schroeder, M.R., "Progress in Architectural Acoustics and Artificial  
Reverberation: Concert Hall Acoustics and Number Theory", J. of the Audio  
Eng. Soc., 32(4) pp. 194-203 (1984).  
10. Blauert, J. and Lindemann, W., "Auditory Spaciousness: Some further  
psychoacoustic analyses", J. Acoustical Soc. Am. 80 (2), August, 1986.  
11. Griesinger, D., "Theory and Design of a Consumer Environment Proc-  
essor", presented at the Los Angeles AES Convention, Nov., 1988, preprint  
available.  
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Sp e c ific a tio ns 7  
C P-1 Dig ita l Aud io Enviro nm e nt Pro c e sso r  
Frequency Response:  
Unprocessed channels:  
Processed channels:  
10 Hz - 100 kHz, +1, -3dB*  
10 Hz - 16 kHz, +1, -3dB*  
*Ref. 1 kHz  
THD:  
Front:  
Sides:  
Less than .05%, 1 kHz, max level  
Less than .05%, 1 kHz, max level  
Center:  
Rears:  
Subwoofer:  
Less than .05%, 1 kHz, max level  
Less than .05%, 1 kHz, max level  
Less than .05%, 10 - 100 Hz, max level  
Minimum Input Level:  
Maximum Output Level:  
Input Impedance:  
300 mVRMS  
3.5 VRMS  
50 k ohms  
500 ohms  
Output Impedance:  
Signal to Noise Ratio:  
Voltage:  
85dB min, A-weighted, Ref. 1 kHz max level  
120V/ 60 Hz  
100V/ 50-60 Hz  
220V/ 50 Hz  
240V/ 50 Hz  
Dimensions:  
Weight:  
17"W x 12.5"D x 2.5"H  
11 lbs.  
Optional Equipment:  
Rack-mount adapter, Lexicon Part# 021-06639  
Specifications subject to change without notice.  
Patents are pending on the CP-1  
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3 Oak Park  
Bedford, MA 01730 USA  
Telephone 781-280-0300  
FAX 781-280-0490  
06/00  
|
Lexicon Part #070-06619  
|
Rev 3.0  
Printed in the United States of America  
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