. The most basic part of a vision mixer is a
bus, which is a signal path consisting of multiple video inputs that feed a single output. On the panel, a bus is represented by a row of buttons; pressing one of those buttons selects the video signal in that bus. Older video mixers had two equivalent buses (called the A and B bus; such a mixer is known as an
A/B mixer), and one of these buses could be selected as the main out (or
program) bus. Most modern mixers, however, have one bus that is always the program bus, the second main bus being the
preview (sometimes called
preset) bus. These mixers are called
flip-flop mixers, since the selected source of the preview and program buses can be exchanged. Some switchers allow the operator to select A/B or flip-flop modes. Both the preview and program buses usually have their own
video monitors displaying the video selected. Another main feature of a vision mixer is the
transition lever, also called a
T-bar or
fader bar. This lever, similar to an
audio fader, is used to transition between two buses. Note that in a flip-flop mixer, the position of the main transition lever does not indicate which bus is active, since the program bus is
always the active or
hot bus. Instead of moving the lever by hand, a button (commonly labeled
mix,
auto or
auto trans) can be used, which performs the transition over a user-defined period of time. Another button, usually labeled
cut or
take, swaps the preview signal to the program signal instantaneously. The type of transition used can be selected in the transition section. Common transitions include
dissolves (similar to an
audio crossfade) and pattern wipes. A third bus used for
compositing is the
key bus. A mixer may have more than one key bus, but often they share only one set of buttons. Here, one signal can be selected for keying over the program bus. The
digital on-screen graphic image that will be seen in the program is called the
fill, while the mask used to
cut the key's translucence is called the
source. This source, e.g.
chrominance,
luminance, pattern or split and can be selected in the keying section of the mixer. Usually, a key is turned on and off the same way a transition is. For this, the transition section can be switched from program mode to key mode. These three main buses together form the basic mixer section called program/preset (P/P). Bigger production mixers may have a number of additional sections of this type, which are called mix/effects (M/E) sections and numbered. Any M/E section can be selected as a source in the P/P stage, making the mixer operations much more versatile, since effects or keys can be composed
offline in an M/E and then go
live at the push of one button. After the P/P section, there is another keying stage called the
downstream keyer (DSK). It is mostly used for keying text or graphics and has its own
cut and
mix buttons. The signal before the DSK keyer is called the
clean feed. After the DSK is one last stage that overrides any signal with black, usually called
fade to black or
FTB. == Setup ==