46
Zektor Switch Serial Protocol, Version 0.16, 5/13/16
Power, Switching, and Muting
this will set zone 3 through 12 to source 5.
‘DSZ’ Query Examples
To make parsing the response strings easier, only one response string is sent per zone. Or, in the case of
channel breakaways, only one response string per channel is returned. The response string is sent as a
fixed length string using leading zeroes.
You can request the mapping of multiple zones, with one command, and still only one response string
per zone will be returned, for instance:
^DSZ @1@3@4?
could return:
^+$
<-
Indicates no errors in the command
^=DSZ @001,012$
<-
Source 12 mapped to zone 1
^=DSZ @003,016$
<-
Source 16 mapped to zone 3
^=DSZ @004,015$
<-
Source 15 mapped to zone 4’
‘MZ’ Mute (Disconnect / Power down) Zone(s) -- Analog Audio Switch
This is the command used to hard mute, or disconnect, or power down an audio zone. When audio is
disconnected, the sound is immediately switched off.
This command should
not
be used to simply mute audio on a zone. This command is nearly equivalent
to setting a zone to source 0. It disconnects the zone from anything. The only difference between a
“
^MZ @1,1$
” command and a “
^SZ @1,0$
”, is that the MZ command remembers its source connec-
tion. When using the MZ command you can “reconnect” to the current source. When using an “
^SZ
@1,0$
” command to disconnect a zone, the controller will have to keep track of a source if a “recon-
nect” command is required.
The different forms of the MZ command are:
^MZ @
zone
,@
zone
,
mute
$
Mute (disconnect) all channels of a zone or zones.
^MZ @
zone
,+$
Toggle the settings of zones.
^MZ @
zone
,?$
Read current settings of given zones.
Response Strings:
^=MZ @
zone
,
mute
$
Where:
@
zone
= One (or more) zones to be mapped.
mute
= Mute setting (0=Unmuted, 1=Muted).
‘MZ’ Examples
The ‘MZ’ command in its simplest form:
^MZ @1,@3,1$
mutes all channels of the zones ‘1’ and ‘3’. You can also mute/unmute multiple zones using a single
command. For instance:
^MZ @1,1,@3,@4,0$
mutes zone ‘1’, and unmutes zones ‘3’ and ‘4’.