JoeCo BBSG24MP User Guide
JoeCo BBSG24MP User Guide
JoeCo BBSG24MP User Guide
BBSG24MP
SOUNDGRID™ RECORDER
User Manual
V 3.2 rev 1 Date: June 2018
This manual only covers the BBSG24MP Recorder with built in Mic Preamps and
interface to the Waves™ Soundgrid™ network
© JoeCo Limited 2009 - 2018. E&OE. All rights reserved. All trademarks and names are
recognised as the property of their respective owners
Do not remove covers: Operate the equipment with its covers correctly fitted. Refer
any service work on the equipment to competent authorised technical personnel
only.
Power sources: Connect the equipment using the mains power adapter supplied.
Power cord routing: Route power cords so that they are not likely to be walked on,
stretched or pinched by items placed upon or against them.
Grounding: Do not defeat the grounding and polarisation means of the power cord
adapter or plug. Do not remove or tamper with any ground connection in the power
cord.
Water and moisture: To reduce the risk of fire or electric shock do not expose the
equipment to rain or moisture or use it in damp or wet conditions. Do not place
containers of liquid on it which might spill into any openings.
Ventilation: Do not obstruct any ventilation. If the equipment is to be operated in a
flight-case ensure that it is constructed to allow adequate ventilation.
Heat and vibration: Do not locate the equipment in a place subject to excessive heat
or direct sunlight as this could be a fire hazard. Locate the equipment away from any
devices which produce heat or cause excessive vibration.
Servicing: Unplug the power immediately if the unit is exposed to moisture, spilled
liquid, the power adapter becomes damaged, during lightening storms, or if smoke,
odour or noise is noticed. Refer servicing to qualified technical personnel only.
Installation: Install the equipment in accordance with the instructions printed in this
User Guide. Use the equipment connections for their intended purpose only.
Precautions
Environment: Protect from excessive dirt, dust, heat and vibration both when
operating and storing. Avoid drinks spillage, tobacco ash, smoke, and exposure to
rain and moisture. If the equipment becomes wet, remove power immediately. Allow
to dry out thoroughly before using again.
Cleaning: Avoid the use of chemicals, abrasives or solvents. The equipment is best
cleaned with a dry lint-free cloth. Do not remove the cover to clean the unit.
Copyright Warning
JoeCo’s recorder products are designed to enable you to record and reproduce
material to which you own the copyright, or material which the copyright owner has
granted you permission to record and/or reproduce.
It is illegal to record, reproduce, distribute, sell, hire, lend, perform or broadcast all or
part of a work (written or musical composition, broadcast, performance or similar)
whose copyright is held by a third party without permission of that third party.
Do not use this Product for purposes that could infringe a copyright held by a third
party. JoeCo and its authorised distributors and resellers assume no responsibility
whatsoever with regard to any infringements of third-party copyrights arising
through your use of this Product.
The BlackBox Recorder is not a standard multitrack recorder nor is it a digital audio
workstation (DAW). It has been designed specifically to capture multitrack audio in
live acquisition applications. It will typically be used to record audio material onto a
USB2 drive for subsequent editing and processing in a DAW.
A number of specific features have been added to make it suitable and safe in a live
environment such as playback lockout, protection against accidentally ending a
recording, no general purpose operating system, etc.
Some features often found in other multitrack machines are not present in the
BlackBox Recorder such as overdubbing and punch in facilities.
Control buttons
O
Data
Headphones
The left hand side of the unit contains the metering section. Each channel or Track [1
through 24] has 3 rows of metering LEDs above the Track Arming LEDs.
The metering LEDs get brighter as the signal level gets louder and the Red LED can be
set to stay on when an overload occurs. The meters are positioned above a two
colour LED that indicates whether the track is armed ready for recording or not
(Green for playback ready; Red for record ready). There are also indicators for power,
Disk activity and Playback Lockout
To the right of the JoeCo logo is the control wheel which has a number of functions
explained later.
Then there are the main Transport controls [PLAY, STOP, RECORD] with the four
other control buttons above [L-R: BACK, MARK, LOOP, MENU].
Finally, at the right hand side of the front panel is the colour LCD display. This is the
primary user interface and shows the current mode of operation along with settings
and any error messages. Most screens are colour coded to more easily see what is
happening from a distance.
Video/WC
Power
SoundGrid
Mic / line inputs
Option Card
Timecode
Headphones
Keyboard
Remote
Clocks
JoeCo
Disk
The upper three 25 way D-type (also called D-sub) connectors are the main
microphone / line analogue input connectors. The lower three D-type connectors are
the balanced outputs. The cable looms should conform to the TASCAM standard for
analogue i/o. (N.B. all pin outs are available on the visitor page of the JoeCo website
Login area)
The 9-pin socket should connect to the JoeCoRemote hardware which allows full
control of the unit using an iPad. This is the recommended method of controlling the
BBSG24MP.
Linear timecode can be provided on the tip of the ¼” jack socket; the ring of the same
socket is for a momentary contact closure or footswitch. The BNC connector can
accept either a Video or WordClock clocking signal
A PS2 keyboard socket allows control and text input from a standard PS2 style
keyboard.
Power is provided by the supplied external power supply via the Kycon 4 pole
connector (pin 1&3 = GND, 2&4 = +12V @ 3.3A)
The rest of the rear panel is fairly self explanatory we hope and is explained in
greater detail later in this manual. There are more technical details on the JoeCo
website (www.joeco.co.uk) should you require them.
Alternatively you can use 25way D-sub to XLR-F cables looms (one for each bank of 8
channels). These are wired to the TASCAM analogue format and can be purchased
through your supplier.
The analogue audio outputs, if required, are line level and appear on the lower row
of 25way D-sub connectors. They use the same pin out (TASCAM analogue format) as
the input connectors.
The BlackBox Recorder line outputs can be switched between Low and Pro levels in
the Setup Menu (page 30).
The headphone socket on the BBSG24MP can be used to monitor the internal Pre
Fade Listen (PFL) bus to allow for monitoring individual channels.
Power connection
The BBSG24MP is supplied with its own power supply which plugs into the dc inlet at
the rear right of the unit (or left if you’re looking at the rear as you read this).
Although the unit can accept a suitable regulated dc input from a 12V battery
powered cart for example it should always be used with the power supply provided if
possible. A mounting lug is provided to cable tie the power cable if you wish.
SoundGrid Server
BBSG24MP
Do not connect other networks to the SoundGrid switch. Use different network ports
on your computer for other networks (such as internet).
SoundGrid Software
The BBSG24MP can be used with a number of SoundGrid applications, including
eMotion LV1, MultiRack SoundGrid, and SoundGrid Studio. SoundGrid software
drivers are installed with Waves Central, a Waves application for downloading
software and managing licenses.
Select the SETUP window fromteh top toolbar (highlighted in light blue)
Choose the System Inventory Tab (from the left-hand vertical toolbar)
The BBSG24MP can now be assigned in the Device Racks of the System Inventory tab
as shown above.
This means that most drives that are both Mac and PC compatible will work ok. USB2
can carry up to 480Mbits/s of data and for recording 24 tracks of 96kHz/24bit the
maximum data rate we need is less than 60MBits/s so there’s normally plenty of
headroom. JoeCo has already tested numerous USB2 drives from Western Digital,
Glyph, Seagate, Verbatim, Samsung, Buffalo and others and found them to work well.
We chose the FAT32 filing system because it is compatible with all major Operating
Systems and it’s also the format chosen for the AES31 digital interchange standard.
USB3 drives are backwards compatible with USB2 and should also work well.
However, bus-powered drives (such as the Western Digital Passport series) typically
draw more current during spin up than the USB2 specification allows (limited to
500mA) and can therefore not be used without providing a separate power supply.
Standard Flash RAM drives (aka Pen Drives) are not fast enough to take the full USB2
data rates that the BBR requires but the fastest ones normally work ok. Larger thumb
drives (128GB and bigger) are typically much faster and usually work very well.
Ask the shop if you can try the drive with the BBR before you buy it.
Plug the disk drive into the USB2 socket on the back of the BBSG24MP unit and then
power up the drive. The drive will be scanned, logged and ready to use in a matter of
seconds. If it takes more than 20 seconds to log the drive or the BlackBox reports
“WRONG DISK FORMAT”, check that the disk is formatted correctly. The BlackBox can
be used to reformat the drive to FAT32 (see page 33)
The basic screen should look something like this when first powered up with a drive
attached.
It does this so that all today’s recordings will be kept together in one folder. If you
happen to be recording late into the night past midnight, the BBR will not create a
new folder until the next time it’s powered up so all the recordings during a typical
concert for example will still be kept together.
After you’ve finished recording you can rename the current folder using the NAME
MANAGER Menu or Ctrl-f on a keyboard. The BBR will then create a new folder with
today’s date the next time you enter Record
The front panel controls are all touch sensitive. Just place the flat part of your finger
firmly on the panel over the control – the area your finger covers is more important
than the pressure you apply.
Setting up
Setting up your BBSG24MP will largely be determined by what you are trying to
achieve. If the unit is being used in a TV or Film Sound environment then it’s likely to
be the primary recorder connected directly to the microphones and any other audio
sources. It might be mounted on a cart and thus powered from a 12V battery power
source in which case you may want to disable banks of channels that you are not
currently using to preserve battery life for example
If you are recording a concert, you may want to patch the unit into Mic Splitters at
the stage box and then you need to determine whether phantom power for capacitor
mics is derived from the Monitor console, the FOH console or the BBSG24MP. You
might also want to use the BBSG24MP as the primary mic pre amps and use the
balanced outputs to feed the monitors and PA.
For each channel you will need to set the input to mic or line input level; enable
phantom power if using Capacitor (Condenser) mics; decide whether you need to
insert a High Pass Filter (HPF) to reduce low frequency “pops” and plosives; set the
soft limiter if required; determine whether you need to reverse the phase on any
channel. Then you can adjust the input levels.
The Recording source can be selected between either SOUNDGRID (to record the
output of the mixing console) or ANALOGUE (to record the output of the Mic Preams
directly). This is controlled by pressing MENU and selecting the recording source
At the end of a recording the BBR will have to do some housekeeping such as closing
the files and writing file headers to the disk to keep it in prime condition. The DISK
LED and the STOP button will flash until the BBR has finished writing to the disk. Wait
until it has finished before starting the next operation. It’s particularly important
that the files have been closed before you unplug the USB disk drive. The BlackBox
will try to recover files that have not been properly closed (see Safe’n’Sound
Record Recovery - page 40) but there’s no guarantee especially if another operating
system has accessed and written to the disk in the meantime).
The BBR remembers its settings in Flash RAM internally so you should only have to
set things up once.
Fast Wind
FAST FORWARD and REWIND functions within a recording are achieved by holding
the STOP button down whilst moving the data wheel. Playback will then commence
from this position. On the JoeCoRemote, press one of the arrows on the wheel and
then drag.
When a previous recording is loaded for playback, the 24 Green “playback ready”
LEDs positioned underneath the meter section indicate which tracks are present and
ready for playback.
If you load a Take that was recorded at a different sample rate, a warning will be
displayed in the Name area of the main screen showing the original sample rate in
red.
Recent Takes
As recordings are made or replayed, they will automatically be placed into the Recent
Recordings list which is located in the Take Select menu. This allows you to quickly
access the days’ Recordings. The Recent Takes list is stored on the disk itself so the
list will change if you use a different disk.
File Names
The BBR names the audio files it creates as follows:
nnn-tt.WAV
Where nnn is the take number (between 001 and 999) and tt is the track number
(between 01 and 24).
The track number is not shown on the main BBR user interface screen but it’s used by
the BBR to determine which file replays through which output and will be vital in post
production.
Renaming Takes
By using the JoeCoRemote or if you plug a PS2 keyboard into the BBSG24MP it is
possible to rename Takes to help find them more easily later on the BBR or in post
production on a Digital Audio Workstation (DAW). The keyboard connector on the
BBR is a PS2 style Mini DIN connector. It is also possible to name Takes and tracks
using the menu buttons and data wheel (see page 32) but you’ll find it much quicker
using the JoeCoRemote or a standard PS2 keyboard
To rename a take: on the JoeCoRemote use the Name Manager MENU; on a PS2
keyboard, use “Ctrl-S” and then type in the name that you want. The BBR will accept
capital and lower case letters, spaces and all normal characters that computers will
accept in file names except the dash “-“ (any illegal characters will be replaced with
an underscore “_”). You can navigate backwards and forwards using the left and right
arrow keys. The delete and backspace keys operate as you would expect. Finish by
pressing “Enter” on the keyboard. (Escape will cancel any changes). The resulting
tracks will be called
where “Take Name” is the new name that you typed. This will rename all the tracks
[01 - 24] of this take in this folder with this new Take Name. [Note: It is important for
the BlackBox to keep the nnn-tt prefix so that it knows which audio files belong
together as a Take and which track is to be played out of which output. It also helps
some DAWs to place the tracks in their playlist in the correct order / position for
playback.]
So for example, if the current take is 001(unnamed) and you decide to name it
“Scene1”, you will end up with the following files on your disk
001-01.Scene1.WAV
001-02.Scene1.WAV
001-03.Scene1.WAV
...
001-24.Scene1.WAV
Renaming tracks
To rename a track: use “Ctrl+<digit><digit>T” on the keyboard (where <digit><digit>
is a number between 01 and 24 to select which track you want to name) then type in
the name that you want. The BBR will accept the same characters as for Take Names,
above. Finish renaming the track by pressing “Enter” on the keyboard (or arrow
up/down if you want to immediately name another track). The resulting tracks will be
called
where “Track Name” is the new name that you just typed. If you use the down arrow,
the BBR will automatically move on to the next track so that you can rename it too.
So for example, assuming that channel 1 is George’s mic and channel 2 is Sandra’s,
you would use “Ctrl-01T” and then type “George” before pressing “Down Arrow” and
then “Sandra”, etc. and you would end up with files named:
001-01.Scene1-George.WAV
001-02.Scene1-Sandra.WAV
001-03.Scene1-Jimmy.WAV
...
001-24.Scene1-Daphne.WAV
The next Take might contain files named as follows:
002-01.Scene2-George.WAV
002-02. Scene2 -Sandra.WAV
002-03. Scene2 -Jimmy.WAV
...
002-24. Scene2 -Daphne.WAV
But it would use the track names you have entered automatically.
It is completely optional whether you rename Takes or Tracks. The BBR does not
require you to do it; it merely helps in post production when the disk has hundreds of
WAV files in each folder. The basic naming scheme and time stamping will keep the
files well organised anyway.
Having set some Markers, the LOOP button will create a playback Loop and
continually play back the MARKED section of the Take.
If the LOOP button is pressed between Markers, the BlackBox will continue in
playback until it reaches the next Marker, Loop back to the previous Marker and then
recommence playback. There will be a short break in playback while the BlackBox
loops back to the earlier Marker (i.e. it does not create a continuous loop).
If, however, there are no later Markers, pressing the LOOP button will create a Loop
between the last Marker and the current playback position.
LOOP mode will remain active until you press LOOP again. You are able to STOP and
restart PLAY whilst remaining in LOOP mode.
In STOP, holding down MARK and using the data wheel will jump to the next and
subsequent Markers within the Take so that you can start playback from a specific
Marker.
In PLAYBACK, holding down the MARK button while using the data wheel enables the
deletion of Markers that are no longer required in the current Take. Clockwise
movement will delete one (or more) later Marker(s); Anticlockwise will delete one,
(or more) earlier Marker(s).
The Markers are stored in the audio files in what’s known as a Cue Chunk, which
many (but not all) DAWs can read. So they may also be used to indicate a place in the
recording to post production. Best to check with your post house whether they can
read this information.
Monitoring
The BBSG24MP has two TRS jack sockets. The rear socket is designated as the
producer or director’s output and will always
carry the monitor mix. The front socket is the
Engineer’s output and will either carry the
monitor mix or will monitor the PFL bus. This
allows the engineer to listen to specific mic
channels without disturbing the mix that the
producer is listening to. The mix can be quickly
adjusted on the monitor page of the
The data wheel will alter the volume of the headphone output (when not in the
MENU). The volume is displayed on the colour display while you adjust it.
If you hold down the BACK button whilst using the data wheel, you will change what
is heard in the engineer’s headphones. The options are “MIX”; “ALL”; “1-2”; “3-4”,
etc. with ALL being the summing mix mentioned above and the individual track pairs
being a pre-fade listen of each pair of tracks (panned hard left and right). The
Monitor... section of the menu controls the level and pan settings in the MIX mode.
The Monitor Menu allows you to set the BACK button to toggle the data wheel
function between selecting the PFL / solo channel and controlling the headphone
volume. In this mode, the MARK button will cancel PFL and return to the MIX setting
allowing you to quickly switch back to the monitor mix when you need to. The MARK
and BACK buttons flash while the data wheel is used to indicate this mode.
The Monitor Menu also allows you to elect to solo individual channels in mono,
rather than pairs in stereo. It is also where you set the peak hold time. You can select
the Hi-res metering mode where the Track Arm LEDs on the meter display will show
the level on the channel(s) that are being soloed.
Once you have adjusted and confirmed the setting or parameter that you want to
change, use the BACK button to exit the menu and get back to the normal main
screen display. On the whole it’s pretty obvious so try it.
Playback Lockout
Playback Lockout has two settings, on & off, indicated by a tick () beside the option
in the MENU and the LED in the Meter area. In the setup menu you can decide to
control Playback Lockout manually or set it to be asserted automatically whenever
you enter record as a safety measure.
Track Arm...
Arm All: Arms (enables recording on) all tracks.
Disarm All: Disarms (disables recording on) all tracks.
Arm ticked: Arms the tracks (listed below) that have a tick “” (sometimes called a
“check mark”) beside them.
1...24: the tracks which can be ticked or unticked using the MENU button and then
Armed using the Arm Ticked menu item above. Track names (if used) are displayed
here also. (See Renaming Tracks on page 20)
Clear all track names: this clears all the displayed track names – subsequent
recordings will not use track names (unless you rename them)
Copy names from take: this loads the track names from the current take into the
track display. Subsequent recordings will use these track names.
Edit take updates template: when ticked the template will be updated when you edit
a track name.
Recent Takes...
Provides a list of the most recently played Takes – useful if you’re on tour and want
to use the same takes in each venue for sound checking
Select Take...
Allows you to choose a Take from within the selected Folder.
MicPre
The Mic Pre Overview gives you a quick view of the settings for all the Mic Pre input
channels though it is recommended to use the
JoeCoRemote app on an iPad for general use.
Input/Output...
This option allows the setup and configuration of the digital option cards. When a
card is installed, you need to select it in the menu. (If you have changed the card you
will need to power the system off and then back on again after selecting the card
type.) Once installed, the digital outputs will usually reflect the individual outputs –
i.e. channel 1 input will be output on both the digital and analogue channel 1).
The input status bar displays whether there are errors or clock slippage. The input
status display is echoed at the top of the main screen if an error or any digital
The Digital Output setup determines whether to send the monitor mix and/or the
engineer’s mix to spare channels in the output stream.
Setup...
This section contains the most frequently adjusted parameters.
Reference Clock
When set to SoundGrid Mode, the BlackBox BBSG24MP will take its Reference clock
settings directly from the Soundgrid interface and is controllable from within the LV1
or SoundGrid Studio application.
It is very important that you understand why digital clocking is important, if you don’t
know already. Please spend some time talking to people further down the post
production process to find out what they would like or recommend, or consult our
FAQs on the JoeCo website.
The BBR can only read timecode (i.e. act as a timecode Slave) it does not generate
timecode (i.e. act as a timecode Master). The standard BlackBox does not chase
timecode or lock to it. If you require synchronous playback you will need the
BlackBox Player option which allows playback to be triggered in sync with incoming
timecode.
Sample rates
Select between 44.1, 48, 88.2 and 96kHz or set in
the SoundGrid controlling system.
Wordsize:
24bit or 16bit. We recommend that you always
choose 24bit unless you’re really short on disk
space or your post production requires 16bit.
Control...
The BlackBox Recorder can accept commands from an external control device such as
a console or hardware controller.
Remote Mode:
The BBR1 can respond to open loop MIDI Machine Control (MIDI MMC) protocol
commands for transport controls and track arming/disarming. Note though that the
BBR1 has no MIDI return path (open loop) and so cannot acknowledge the receipt of
a MIDI command or display the take time on the controller. The BBR can also
respond to Sony 9-pin Machine Control (also known as SONY PII) protocol commands
for transport controls and track arming/disarming. The JoeCoRemote iPad app is also
selected here connected either via WiFi control or as a wired pad.
Local Control allows you to disarm the front panel when remotely controlling the BBR
TC rejam after split “jam-syncs” the reader after every time you split a recording with
the REC button.
TC start starts record automatically starts a recording when the BlackBox sees
incoming timecode.
TC restart splits record will start a new take when there is a discontinuity in the
received timecode.
TC stop stops record will end a recording when there is a break in the timecode.
MIDI Setup is used to set up the MIDI control input. More details are available in the
visitor area of the JoeCo website
WiFi setup is used to configure the WiFi operation with the JoeCoRemote. Again,
more details are available on the JoeCo website
Power Control
This MENU allows various parts of the system to
be powered down to conserve battery life when
the unit is under battery power. The options
available are as shown here:
Playback Lockout
You can set playback lockout to be automatically asserted after you’ve made a
recording, or to be controlled manually. See Playback Lockout section on page 25
Select Date/Time from the Setup menu. Select which field you want to adjust. Press
MENU to edit the field with the data wheel and then Menu again to confirm and the
BBR moves onto the next field automatically. Press BACK when finished.
TAKE or SONG
The BBSG24MP unit can be used in both Film and TV environments and concert and
other recordings. The Use the Term: TAKE or SONG option allows the user to switch
the nomenclature used in the user interface. It has no effect on the files created.
Reset
Resets the BlackBox back to its factory state – useful if you’ve forgotten what
parameters you’ve changed.
Monitor...
Solo in: mono or stereo.
Hi-res metering turns the row of Record Enable LEDs into a high resolution level
meter showing what signal level is on the PFL bus.
Monitor Mix and Monitor Pan allow the adjustment of level and pan for each
channel feeding the headphone Mix.
Route Mix to: This setting allows you to route the mix to a pair of channels if you
wish to record a monitor mix to give to someone immediately after the recording.
The default is to send the monitor mix to the headphone outputs only.
BACK: Toggles level/select controls the way that the PFL monitor operates. (See page
23)
Next (^p): will prename the next Take that you record
Reuse next takename will use the same take name for each subsequent recording
Folder (^f): Displays the current folder’s name and allows you to rename it. Note
though that the BlackBox will always record into a folder named with today’s date so
if you rename today’s folder before you’ve finished recording all subsequent
recordings will be made into a new folder.
Take (^s): This displays and allows you to name the current take.
Use track names on rec enables the template function so that each track name will
be taken from the template.
Copy names from take copies any track names in the current take into the template.
Track 1...Track 24. These are the template names for each track.
Track Names in Take… this allows you to modify the track names for the current take
without affecting the template.
edit also updates template … When ticked, using ^t on a QWERTY keyboard will
update both the current take and the template.
Disk Manage...
This allows you to set up certain parameters regarding how you use the disk. It also
allows you to format a USB2 disk drive for use with the BlackBox Recorder and with
any Mac or PC based workstation.
Format...
This option allows you to format a USB2 drive, ready for use with the BlackBox
Recorder, which will also be compatible with any Mac or PC based Digital Audio
Workstation. When you enter this part of the menu, you will first have to Select the
partition that you want to format: The BBR defaults to partition “none” as a safety
measure to prevent accidental formatting of a drive.
Having selected the partition, the BBR displays the current status of that partition.
You can then move onto Format Partition to actually format the drive. Again, there
are warning messages to try and prevent accidents.
The final option in this menu allows you to partition the drive into one or more
usable partitions. This subject is covered in much greater detail in the FAQ section of
the JoeCo website www.joeco.co.uk/main/faqs
Write Protect Disk. This setting will prevent the BBR from writing anything to the
disk. However, it will NOT prevent any other operating system from writing to the
disk.
Software updates
It should be noted that JoeCo may release software upgrades from time to time,
either to add features or to cure bugs that have been found in the software – though
we have endeavoured to remove all that we’ve found.
The software version currently installed into the BBR is displayed on the LCD display
during the boot procedure and can also be seen in the “About” Menu. (N.B. In the
event of reporting any suspected problems you will need to give the whole system
nd
serial number and the entire 2 line of the About Menu as this contains both
software and hardware version information.)
Note your current version and ensure that you have a copy in case the update
process fails for any reason. It is never a good idea to upload a new piece of software
immediately before an important recording – please give yourself enough time to
fully test that the software works to your satisfaction before you need to use it in
anger.
Ensure that you have a stable source of power during the update process – we have
endeavoured to make the update process safe if the power fails during an update,
but there is always the possibility that something could go wrong, requiring a return
to the factory for a chargeable repair.
Download the new update file from the JoeCo website directly into the root folder of
a USB2 hard drive or a FAT32 formatted memory stick (note small memory sticks or
Pen drives are often formatted with FAT16 which will not work).
In the Update menu, set the BBR to “Permit: updates only” and then plug the drive
(or memory stick) into the USB2 socket.
The BBR will notice the presence of the update file and ask you whether you want to
upload it. Select “Yes” by pressing the MENU button or “No” by pressing the BACK
button.
Having uploaded the new file the BBR will automatically reboot into the new
software version. Connect your main disk drive and you’re ready to use the new
software.
The BBR can be set back to “No updates” in the update menu after you’ve loaded the
new software to avoid checking for updates on future boot ups.
It is also possible to upgrade the firmware on the MicPre Input card. More details of
this firmware upgrade option will be provided if required.
Manage Updates
This option should only be used with great caution and is not for the feint hearted. It
allows you to completely remove a field update that you have already installed,
reverting to the original factory version, or to replace the original factory version with
a field update. The only reason for replacing the original factory version with a field
update is to speed up the boot time – typically a field update will add about 10
seconds to the boot time of a BBR which still makes it about 10 times faster to boot
than a normal computer.
IF ANYTHING GOES WRONG OR THE POWER FAILS DURING THIS PROCESS YOUR
BBR WILL HAVE TO BE RETURNED TO THE FACTORY TO BE RECONFIGURED AT YOUR
COST – REPAIRING UNITS THAT HAVE FAILED DURING THIS PROCESS IS
SPECIFICALLY EXCLUDED FROM ANY WARRANTY.
Licence...
This allows you to license certain chargeable options, more details of which are
available on the JoeCo website. You will need to advise JoeCo of the machine key
along with your payment details before JoeCo can enable any optional software. You
will then receive a non-transferable enabling code for your BlackBox which can be
entered into the unit using the Enter key: dialog
After the code is entered you will receive a message on screen affirming that the
code was correct and the relevant menu items will appear.
The BBR1 achieves this link using the “Ext Clk” RCA sockets on the rear panel. The
Master unit will output a sample clock signal to the other units embedding the
control data and timecode into the sub-code of the SPDIF data stream. This clock
signal is intentionally silent with no audio data present to ensure that there is a clean
feed of clock signals between the units. The Slave units can either be daisy chained
together from the Master unit, or (preferably) be fed their clocking and control
signals from a distribution amplifier. You will need short RCA (phono) jumper cables
to connect each subsequent unit.
In the SETUP | CONTROL menu, select Link Mode. Select Master for the recorder you
want to act as the master controller (which will always record channels 1-24). The
Slave units can be set to Slave 1-24 (creating duplicate tracks to those on the master
recorder – though you will obviously have to feed this unit the same audio signals as
the master recorder or you’ll be recording silence!), Slave 25-48, Slave 49-72, and
Slave 73-96. The Slave machines will use the respective numbers (1-24, 25-48, etc.)
to name the tracks that they record and will also use any remote Track Arming data
from a 9-pin or MIDI controller. If you name a take on the Master unit, the Slave units
will rename the tracks on their local disk drives. The slave units automatically take
their clocking and control signals from the link connection and will lock out the
transport controls on all but the master unit.
It is still possible to lock the Master unit to an external clock source, if required, by
plugging an external AES Clock into the Ext Clk In of the Master unit or, on digital
units, clocking all the systems to external word clock. However, do not wire the clock
You then operate the Transport Controls of all the linked BBRs from the Master unit.
Please note though that the headphone monitoring for each unit will still appear only
on the unit that is recording those signals, so you will have to either use multiple
headphones or swap them from one unit to the next if you need to monitor the
higher numbered channels on the Slave systems.
Master/Slave Recording
Any slave units will go into record as soon as their respective disk is ready, so they
may not start together and their time displays may not appear to be perfectly in sync.
However, all the files recorded will have an accurate time-stamp and so will be in
sync when imported and “spotted” to timecode into a DAW. Pressing the REC button
again will start a new take across all units simultaneously.
Master/Slave Playback
In order to play back synchronously, each machine must have its preroll set to ensure
that the disk files can all be ready when they start. The default time will normally be
ok but this can be adjusted in the Control section of the Menu (see page 29). The
tracks from each unit may not necessarily start simultaneously but they will be in
sync when their audio starts.
If you are using multiple BBR1s for Virtual Sound Checking you will want to set
Playback Lockout on the Slave units to Manual.
In the following section the ^ character is used to indicate holding the Ctrl key down
whilst pressing the key i.e. ^s = Ctrl-s
Enter PLAY
Del/. STOP
Ins/0 STOP AND RETURN TO ZERO
* RECORD
+ MOVE TO NEXT CUE POINT
- MOVE TO PREVIOUS CUE POINT
Direct edit from keyboard (various keys combined with ctrl key)
When not editing we implement various control keys to enter text edit directly (without using
menus).
Whenever a disk drive is plugged into the BlackBox Recorder, the disk’s filing
structure is checked and if any audio files are found to not have been closed
properly, Safe’n’Sound tries to repair them automatically, leaving all the files
accessible by normal workstations.
Whilst Safe’n’Sound cannot protect against a physical hard drive failure (which are
very rare nowadays), it helps protect against human error or power failure.
As a background task the BBR scans the disk to calculate the remaining disk space
and to find where the first free space is located on the disk. When it has found this
information and correctly updated the drive, it places a tick or check mark () beside
the remaining disk time.
IMPORTANT: BY USING THIS PRODUCT YOU ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU HAVE READ,
UNDERSTOOD AND AGREE TO BE BOUND BY THESE CONDITIONS OF USE AND THE
TERMS OF THE JOECO SOFTWARE LICENCE AGREEMENT. JOECO’S SOFTWARE
LICENCE AGREEMENT IS SET OUT IN THE USER MANUAL AND MAY ALSO BE FOUND
ON THE JOECO WEBSITE AT WWW.JOECO.CO.UK
PLEASE READ THESE CONDITIONS OF USE (THE "CONDITIONS") CAREFULLY BEFORE USING YOUR JOECO PRODUCT. BY USING
YOUR JOECO PRODUCT YOU ARE AGREEING TO BE BOUND BY THESE CONDITIONS. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE WITH THESE
CONDITIONS, DO NOT USE THIS PRODUCT.
IF YOU DO NOT AGREE WITH THESE CONDITIONS, YOU MAY RETURN THIS PRODUCT WITHIN SEVEN DAYS OF THE DATE YOU
RECEIVED IT TO THE AUTHORISED DISTRIBUTOR OR RESELLER WHERE YOU PURCHASED IT FOR A REFUND, SUBJECT TO
JOECO’S PRODUCT RETURNS POLICY. JOECO’S PRODUCT RETURNS POLICY IS SET OUT IN THE PRODUCT USER MANUAL AND
MAY ALSO BE FOUND ON THE JOECO WEBSITE AT www.joeco.co.uk
Definitions
JoeCo: JoeCo Limited
Product: any product designed, manufactured, distributed or resold by JoeCo including the BlackBox Recorder
(which may be abbreviated to “BBR”). The term “product” includes both the hardware and its associated
software, as defined below.
Legitimate User: a legitimate user (hereinafter referred to as a “User”) is a person, or corporate entity or employee of a
corporate entity who is:
- the owner of a Product (following its original purchase from JoeCo, or an authorised JoeCo distributor or
reseller, or its subsequent purchase from a legitimate owner) and has accepted the terms of this
agreement
- using a Product on loan from its owner, where the owner has given their express permission and ensured
that the user does so only on condition that they first accept the terms of this agreement
- using a Product under a rental agreement with its owner, where the owner has ensured that the user does
so only on condition that they first accept the terms of this agreement
- using a Product under a temporary evaluation arrangement with its owner (which may be JoeCo or one of
its authorised distributors or resellers), for a period determined by the owner, where the owner has
ensured that the user does so only on condition that they first accept the terms of this agreement
Software: the operating software of the Product (whether in read only memory, on any other media or in any other
form) supplied by JoeCo whether installed at the factory or subsequently upgraded by yourself, an
authorised JoeCo distributor or reseller, or any other individual or organisation. It includes remote
control software, documentation, data and any other software, including software updates, supplied by
JoeCo.
- JoeCo Products are not designed, intended or suitable for use in any life-critical applications or situations
or environments where the failure or time delays of, or errors or inaccuracies in, the content, data
or information provided by the JoeCo Product could lead to death, personal injury, or seve re
physical or environmental damage. Any such use is entirely at the risk of the User and JoeCo and its
authorised distributors and resellers have no responsibility or liability whatsoever for any claim arising
from such use.
- JoeCo recorder Products are designed to enable you to record and reproduce material to which you own
the copyright, or material which the copyright owner has granted you permission to record and/or
reproduce.
- It is illegal to record, reproduce, distribute, sell, hire, lend, perform or broadcast all or part of a work
(written or musical composition, broadcast, performance or similar) whose copyright is held by a third
party without permission of that third party.
- JoeCo Products must not be used for purposes that could infringe a copyright held by a third party or
could, in any other way, be illegal. Any such use is entirely at the risk of the User and JoeCo and its
authorised distributors and resellers have no responsibility or liability whatsoever for any claim arising
from such use.
2. Limitations of Liability
Except for JoeCo’s limited Hardware Warranty (see Warranty Information in the relevant JoeCo User Manual or via the
JoeCo website at www.joeco.co.uk), to the maximum extent permitted by applicable law, JoeCo hereby disclaims all
warranties and conditions with respect to the Product and any services performed by use of the Product, either express,
implied or statutory, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties and/or conditions of merchantability,
satisfactory quality, fitness for a particular purpose, accuracy, non-infringement of third party rights or other implied
warranties or conditions.
No oral or written information or advice given by JoeCo or by an authorised JoeCo distributor, reseller or representative
shall create a warranty of any kind.
In no event will JoeCo be liable for incidental, consequential, special, indirect or other damages or claims, even if its
agents have been advised of the possibility of such damages, resulting from the breach of any express or implied
warranty. Such damages may include but are not limited to the following:
In no event will JoeCo's liability for any damages to the User, purchaser or any other person exceed the price paid for
the Product, regardless of any form of the claim.
Some jurisdictions do not allow the exclusion or limitation of incidental or consequential damages, so some of the
above limitations or exclusions may not apply to you.
Product: Any product designed, manufactured, distributed or resold by JoeCo including the BlackBox Recorder
(which may be abbreviated to “BBR”). The term “product” includes both the hardware and its associated
software, as defined below.
Legitimate User: A legitimate user (hereinafter referred to as a “User”) is a person, or corporate entity or employee of a
corporate entity who is:
- the owner of a Product (following its original purchase from JoeCo, or an authorised JoeCo distributor or
reseller, or its subsequent purchase from a legitimate owner) and has accepted the terms of this
agreement
- using a Product on loan from its owner, where the owner has given their express permission and ensured
that the user does so only on condition that they first accept the terms of this agreement
- using a Product under a rental agreement with its owner, where the owner has ensured that the user does
so only on condition that they first accept the terms of this agreement
- using a Product under a temporary evaluation arrangement with its owner (which may be JoeCo or one of
its authorised distributors or resellers), for a period determined by the owner, where the owner has
ensured that the user does so only on condition that they first accept the terms of this agreement
1. General
You agree that:
- The Software is licensed, not sold, to you by JoeCo for use only under the terms of this Licence on the
associated Product
- All ownership rights to the Software belong to JoeCo and/or to JoeCo’s co-developers or suppliers
- You will not copy (except as expressly authorised by this Licence or separately in writing by JoeCo) or
attempt to decompile, reverse engineer, disassemble, derive the source code, modify or create derived
works of any aspects of the Software or hardware provided by JoeCo. You accept that any attempt to do
so would be a violation of the rights of JoeCo, its co-developers and suppliers and constitute a breach of
this agreement.
- JoeCo, its co-developers and suppliers reserve all their rights not expressly granted to you.
- You will use the Software in compliance with all applicable laws, including local laws of the country or
region in which you live and/or use the Software and/or download updates to the Software
Parts of the Software and Product hardware are protected by international patents either granted or pending and other
intellectual property rights.
No licence is granted by this document for use beyond the licensed use of the Software. Violation is subject to damages
under applicable laws.
2. User Licence
You, the User, are entitled to use all parts of the Software for the duration of the life of the Product.
If the Product is sold on to a third party a new user is entitled to the same use, that is to use all parts of the Software
for the duration of the life of the Product, provided that they agree to all the terms of this Licence.
4. Limitations of Use
The Software must not be used for any illegal purposes and especially not for any use involving breach of copyright. The
Software is not licensed for use in any life-critical application. You acknowledge that the JoeCo Software is not
intended or suitable for use in situations or environments where the failure or time delays of, or errors or inaccuracies
in, the content, data or information provided by the JoeCo software or services could lead to death, personal injury, or
severe physical or environmental damage. Any such use is entirely at the risk of the user and the user must hold JoeCo
harmless for any claim arising from such use.
5. Limitations of Liability
You, the User, expressly acknowledge and agree that:
- to the maximum extent permitted by applicable law, use of the JoeCo Software is at your sole risk and that
the entire risk as to satisfactory quality, performance and accuracy is with you
- you have evaluated the Software together with the hardware and accepted its suitability for your
No oral or written information or advice given by JoeCo or by an authorised JoeCo distributor, reseller or representative
shall create a warranty of any kind.
Should the Software prove defective or unsuitable for your application, you will assume the entire cost of all necessary
correction, servicing or repair.
Users of JoeCo products who upgrade to this Software from a previous version should note that JoeCo has no
requirement to supply free of charge upgrades but does so in the interest of adding additional functionality and
improvements for the benefit of its customers. In the event that a change of functionality is made that is not of benefit
to you, your sole recourse is to revert to a previous version of the Software as already properly used under licence and
accepted for use by you.
In no event will JoeCo be liable for incidental, consequential, special, indirect or other damages or claims, even if its
agents have been advised of the possibility of such damages, resulting from the breach of any express or implied
warranty. Such damages may include but are not limited to the following:
In no event will JoeCo's liability for any damages to the User, purchaser or any other person exceed the price paid for
the Product, regardless of any form of the claim.
Some jurisdictions do not allow the exclusion or limitation of incidental or consequential damages, so some of the
above limitations or exclusions may not apply to you.
6. Termination of Licence
This Licence is effective until terminated. Breach of any terms of this Licence by an owner or user of a Product will
automatically terminate the Licence. The Licence is also terminated if the Product is returned under warranty or in
exchange for a full or partial refund or in exchange or part-exchange for another product. Upon termination you will
cease all use of the Software and destroy or return any copies of the Software to JoeCo. Sections 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10
and 11 of this Licence shall survive any such termination.
7. Force Majeure
JoeCo will not be liable or responsible for any failure to perform, or delay in performance of, any of its obligations
under this Licence that are caused by an event outside of its reasonable control.
8. Waiver
If JoeCo fails, at any time during the term of this Licence, to insist upon strict performance of any of your obligations
under this Licence, or if it fails to exercise any of the rights or remedies to which it is entitled under this Licence, this
shall not constitute a waiver of such rights or remedies and shall not relieve you from compliance with such obligations.
A waiver by JoeCo of any default shall not constitute a waiver of any subsequent default.
No waiver by JoeCo of any of the terms of this Licence shall be effective unless it is expressly stated to be a waiver and
is communicated to you in writing.
In the event that any translation of this Licence (from its original in UK-English language version) is carried out for
different countries and there is a dispute between the UK-English and any non UK-English version, the UK-English
version of this Licence shall take precedence, to the extent not prohibited by local law in your jurisdiction.
This Warranty:
- gives you specific legal rights, and you may also have other rights in certain countries or states
- provides that, during the Warranty period, JoeCo will, at its sole option, either replace, repair or refund the
purchase price of any JoeCo Product that proves to be defective in materials or workmanship on inspection
by JoeCo or one of its authorised service providers
- excludes power supplies and cables
- includes labour and materials (except power supplies and cables) but excludes shipping to and from JoeCo
or one of its authorised service providers, minimal handling charges and insurance
- is only valid within the country in which the Product was originally purchased
- can only be exercised by the original retail purchaser and cannot be assigned or transferred
- starts from the date of delivery from the JoeCo distributor or reseller to the purchaser
- is extended to the minimum level required by law in those countries or states in which such extension is
required by legislation
- applies to a repaired or replacement Product until the end of the period of the original Warranty or thirty
days from the date of dispatch of the repaired or replaced Product, whichever is the longer.
After the RMA number is obtained, the Product (including the power supply) should be shipped to the address given by
JoeCo in protective packaging (the original packaging if possible) with a description of the problem and proof of
Warranty coverage. The RMA number should be clearly written on the package.
Proof of Warranty coverage must be presented in the form of the original dated sales receipt or other positive proof
that the Product is within the Warranty period.
When returning goods under Warranty, the purchaser is responsible for shipment and for the risk of loss or damage
during shipment. JoeCo therefore recommends that such shipments are fully insured and sent by Registered Post,
Recorded Delivery, or via a courier to guarantee receipt.
JoeCo reserves the right to update any Product returned under Warranty.
3. Limitations of Liability
JoeCo specifically disclaims all other warranties. The Warranty contained herein supersedes any other warranties or
representations whether express or implied or otherwise, with respect to the Product, and specifically excludes any
implied warranties and/or conditions of merchantability, satisfactory quality, fitness for a particular purpose, accuracy,
non-infringement of third party rights or other implied warranties or conditions.
The remedy for breach of this limited Warranty shall not include any other damages. In no event will JoeCo be liable for
incidental, consequential, special, indirect or other damages or claims, even if its agents have been advised of the
possibility of such damages, resulting from the breach of any express or implied warranty. Such damages may include
but are not limited to the following:
- any loss of profit or any other commercial damage
- partial or total loss of data incurred whilst using the Product
- the cost of recovery of lost data
- inability to use or to continue to use the Product itself or any connected device
- damage to property
- damage based on inconvenience, loss of time or interrupted operation
In no event will JoeCo's liability for any damages to the purchaser or any other person exceed the price paid for the
Product, regardless of any form of the claim.
Some jurisdictions do not allow the exclusion or limitation of incidental or consequential damages, so some of the
above limitations or exclusions may not apply to you.
5. Force Majeure
JoeCo will not be liable or responsible for any failure to perform, or delay in performance of, any of its obligations
under this Warranty that are caused by an event outside of its reasonable control.
6. Waiver
If JoeCo fails, at any time during the term of this Warranty, to insist upon strict performance of any of your obligations
under this Warranty, or if it fails to exercise any of the rights or remedies to which it is entitled under this Warranty,
this shall not constitute a waiver of such rights or remedies and shall not relieve you from compliance with such
obligations.
A waiver by JoeCo of any default shall not constitute a waiver of any subsequent default.
No waiver by JoeCo of any of the terms of this Warranty shall be effective unless it is expressly stated to be a waiver
and is communicated to you in writing.
7. Severability
If any provision of this Warranty is found void, invalid or unenforceable, it will not affect the validity of the balance of
the Warranty, which shall remain valid and enforceable according to its terms. In the event any remedy hereunder is
8. Entire Warranty
This Warranty constitutes the entire warranty provided to you by JoeCo and supersedes all prior written agreements
and all representations, undertakings and promises given or implied by anything said or written by JoeCo or by an
authorised JoeCo distributor, reseller or representative. JoeCo will not be bound by any modification or amendment of
this Warranty unless it is in writing and signed by JoeCo.
In the event that any translation of this Warranty (from its original in UK-English language version) is carried out for
different countries and there is a dispute between the UK-English and any non UK-English version, the UK-English
version of this Licence shall take precedence, to the extent not prohibited by local law in your jurisdiction.
9. Jurisdiction
This Warranty shall be construed, interpreted, and governed by the laws of England. This Warranty shall not be
governed by the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods, the application of which
is hereby expressly excluded.
Product Returns
To return any JoeCo Product, the purchaser must first call, email or write to JoeCo (see the JoeCo website at www.joeco.co.uk
for contact details) to obtain JoeCo’s agreement to the return and a Returned Materials Authorisation (RMA) number. JoeCo
will issue an RMA and instructions for returning the Product if it agrees that:
Please note that any Product returned due to incorrect delivery must be in a resalable condition to receive a credit note.
Any Product which is returned to JoeCo or to one of its distributors or resellers without authorisation, i.e. one for which an RMA
number has not been issued by JoeCo, will be returned to the purchaser at the purchaser’s expense.
After the RMA number is obtained, the Product should be shipped to the address provided by JoeCo in protective packaging
(the original packaging if possible) with a note giving the reason for the return. The RMA number should be clearly written on
the package.
When returning goods, the purchaser is responsible for shipment and for the risk of loss or damage during shipment. JoeCo
therefore recommends that such shipments are fully insured and sent by Registered Post, Recorded Delivery, or via a courier to
guarantee receipt.
Where a Product is returned for repair outside warranty, JoeCo will inspect the Product and provide the purchaser with an
estimated fee for repair. The purchaser will have the option (exercisable within thirty days of notification by JoeCo) to pay this
fee and have the Product repaired and returned, or not pay this fee and have the Product returned un-repaired at their
expense. Thereafter JoeCo reserves the right to dispose of such unrepaired product without further notification.
JoeCo reserves the right to update any Product returned for repair.
Once your registration has been submitted it will be forwarded to JoeCo personnel
who will need to approve your application before issuing you with a password.
JoeCo can only provide support for the current release of software. It is therefore
imperative that you download and use the latest software release
We hope you enjoy using your BlackBox Recorder – we certainly have enjoyed
designing it!