Product manual

Copyright © 2003 Echo Digital Audio Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
Say you want to do 5.1 surround sound playback from a DVD; to do this, you need a single six-
channel wave device. For instance, you could set up your wave-out devices like this:
Layla24 1-6 Analog Out
Layla24 7-8 Analog Out
Layla24 1-8 Digital Out
Now you have only three wave devices a six channel device addressing the first six analog
outputs, a stereo device addressing the next two analog outs, and finally an eight channel device
for the eight digital outputs.
This is the basic idea of Super Channel it allows you to optimally configure your wave devices
for your specific application.
Wave devices can be configured from the console; please refer to the console section of this
document for details.
When would I want to use Super Channel?
Super Channel is useful in the following situations:
- You are using Cakewalk’s SONAR or some other application that supports multichannel
wave devices. SONAR works more efficiently with a multichannel wave device than with
multiple stereo wave devices. We recommend that you decide how many output and
input channels you want to use from SONAR and then configure the wave devices
accordingly.
- You want to do surround sound playback from an app such as Windows Media Player,
WinDVD, or PowerDVD. Please refer to the surround sound setup example, below, for
more information.
- You want to hide channels that you aren’t using. This is especially useful on Windows
2000, where you can only have ten wave devices. Super Channel lets you collapse
unused channels into a single wave device.
Super Channel has no effect on software that uses the ASIO or GSIF interfaces. In addition,
Super Channel is not supported for PureWave mode; there’s no real need for it.