Audio router

An audio router is a device that transports audio signals from inputs to outputs.

Inputs and Outputs

The number of inputs and outputs varies dramatically. The way routers are described is normally number of inputs by number of outputs e.g. 2x1, 256x256.

Signals

The type of signals transported - switched can be analogue - Analog - audio signals or Digital. Digital audio usually is in the AES/EBU standard for broadcast use. Broadband routers can route more than one signal type e.g. analogue or more than one type of digital.

Crosspoints

Because any of the inputs can be routed to any output, the internal arrangement of the router is arranged as a number of crosspoints which can be activated to pass the corresponding signal to the desired output.

Some Manufacturers of audio routers

gollark: (line 516)
gollark: I should really have put it into the secret magic blob.
gollark: It's mostly quite messy, yes, but it's not (except for two subsystems) deliberately obfuscated.
gollark: It's not that obfuscated. The code I link people is the live code running on potatoPCs and which I work on.
gollark: it even has a viewsource command.

See also


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