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Attero Tech unD32 Dante Boxes Facilitate Immersive Audio In ASPIRE Lab At Virginia Tech

Break-out boxes send audio with near-zero latency to 57 loudspeakers from any of the lab's 10 workstations

ASPIRE, an audio engineering technology teaching and research laboratory located in Randolph Hall on the Virginia Tech Blacksburg campus, recently made use of two Attero Tech unD32 32-channel Dante break-out boxes to drive 57 JBL LSR305/LSR308 powered loudspeakers.

Along with equipment from PreSonus, Focusrite, and Warm Audio, any of the 10 workstations in the lab can drive the loudspeakers in the all-Dante setup.

Under the direction of Dr. Michael Roan, the ASPIRE (Acoustics, Signal Processing, and Immersive REality) lab is used to teach the fundamentals of the engineering principles used in audio engineering.

Students learn core engineering, mathematics, and physics topics related to microphone design, loudspeaker design, digital signal acquisition and processing, filtering, room acoustics, human hearing, and high-density loudspeaker array surround sound.

Each student has access to the 10 PC-based workstations with Reaper digital audio workstation. Each PC is connected to a PreSonus Studiolive 16.0.2 16-channel digital mixer. To facilitate studies in immersive audio, the lab is equipped with 57 JBL LSR305/LSR308 loudspeakers driven by two Attero Tech Dante (audio over Ethernet) 32-channel breakout boxes.

To study the principles related to the recording chain, the lab is also equipped with a rack of classic signal processing units from Warm Audio consisting of two WA-12 microphone preamps, two WA-76 1176-style compressor/limiting amplifiers, and two EPQ-WA Pultec-style tube equalizers. These classic outboard gear elements are connected to the Dante network via a Focusrite Rednet 1 device so that students can access any input or output in the rack via Dante.

The ASPIRE lab is also connected to the Acoustics lab in Randolph Hall via a Dante link to a Focusrite Rednet 2 device, which gives undergraduate students access to research equipment such as a G.R.A.S. head and torso simulator for binaural studies and a Bruel and Kjaer 4206 Impedance tube to study acoustic absorption.

Future plans for the lab include a high-bandwidth connection to the CUBE Theatre, also on the Virginia Tech campus, to distribute simultaneous immersive audio for performance and engineering studies.

Dr. Roan, an associate professor in Virginia Tech’s Mechanical Engineering department, states that ”These (Attero Tech) break-out boxes are working fantastically, sending audio with pretty much zero latency to the 57 loudspeakers from any of the lab’s 10 workstations. We’re really loving their functionality.

“Last week 20 middle-schoolers came into the lab completing an ambisonics workshop—flying their favorite tunes around the space. They were literally dancing in the aisles.”

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