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5 April 2011, Cleveland Ohio, USA
A new IP-Audio console from Axia
will debut at the 2011 NAB Convention in Las Vegas. Radius, a compact
networked mixing desk with four stereo buses, eight faders, 16 audio I/O
ports and an Ethernet switch with Gigabit, will retail for just $5,990
USD. This makes Radius the most affordable AoIP console ever.
“No one should have to settle for a featureless console just to meet
budget,” says Axia’s marketing manager, Clark Novak. “And yet, plenty of
stations have told us they’re holding off on replacing consoles because
they’d rather wait than buy something sub-par. Radius solves that
problem.
“Radius isn’t just affordable — it has capabilities you’d expect to
see in consoles twice the price. And it networks! If that doesn’t make
your CFO stand at attention, I don’t know what will.”
Radius features are plentiful:
- 4 stereo mixing buses
- Automatic mix-minus for every fader
- Talkback capabilities
- Networkable – built-in Ethernet switch has six 100Base-T and two
Gigabit ports
- 4 GPIO machine-control ports
- 4 instant-recall Show Profile snapshots
- Record Mode one-touch recording
- Monitor controls for an adjacent studio
- Fan-free mixing engine separate from control surface, with
analog, AES3 and Livewire I/O
- I/O expands using Axia audio / GPIO nodes
- Desktop-mounted – no countertop cutout needed
Additionally, Radius has switchable VU/PPM LED bargraph meters,
100mm. conductive plastic faders, aircraft-quality switches with LED
lighting, onboard NTP-capable clock, event timer, and high-resolution
OLED readouts on each fader strip.
Thanks to its combination of big features and small price, Radius is
an ideal standalone console. However, its built-in Ethernet switch makes
connecting to existing Axia networks simple. Simple Networking allows up
to 4 consoles to be daisy-chained before an external Ethernet switch is
needed.
Axia radio consoles are a hit, with installations in over 2,000
studios worldwide. Axia allows broadcasters to quickly and easily build
audio networks using switched Ethernet to connect a few rooms, or an
entire facility. Axia networks have a total system capacity of more than
10,000 audio streams, and can carry hundreds of digital stereo channels
(plus machine logic and PAD) over a single CAT-6 cable, eliminating much
of the cost normally associated with wiring labor and infrastructure.
Radio pros can see Radius, along with the rest of the Axia line, in
Las Vegas at NAB 2011 in the Telos/Omnia/Axia display. Find us in the
Central Hall, Booth #C3113. For more information, contact Clark Novak at
Axia Audio, via email at
cnovak@AxiaAudio.com
or by phone at +1-216-241-7225.
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Download a print-quality version of this photo from
the Axia photo gallery at www.AxiaAudio.com/pix
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Axia, a Telos company, builds Ethernet-based professional IP-Audio
products for broadcast, sound-reinforcement and commercial audio
applications. Along with the popular Element 2.0 modular console for
on-air, commercial production, audio workstations and personal studios,
Axia products include the PowerStation integrated console engine,
intercom systems, digital audio routers, DSP mixers and processors, and
software for configuring, managing and interfacing networked audio
systems.
This page:
http://www.AxiaAudio.com/news/pr/2011_Radius_NAB.htm |