Manual
Table Of Contents
- 1. Initial Configuration
- 2. Remote Controller
- 3. Main Menu
- 4. Remote Panel Operations
- 4.1 OPERATIONS
- 4.1.1 RECORD
- 4.1.2 Mark
- 4.1.3 Last Cue
- 4.1.4 PLAY
- 4.1.5 IN
- 4.1.6 OUT
- 4.1.7 JOG KNOB
- 4.1.8 Fast Jog
- 4.1.9 Lever
- PLST
- 4.1.11 Browse
- 4.1.12 Insert
- 4.1.13 ENTER
- 4.1.14 MENU
- 4.1.15 CLEAR
- 4.1.16 Network
- 4.1.17 Goto TC
- 4.1.18 Goto IN / Goto OUT
- 4.1.19 Loop
- 4.1.20 Return
- 4.1.21 Page
- 4.1.22 Rebooting the System from the Nano Remote
- 4.2 SELECTION OF CLIP BANKS AND PLAYLISTS
- 4.3 CLIP NUMBERING HIERARCHY
- 4.1 OPERATIONS
- 5. Control Mode
- 6. Pgm + Prv Mode
- 7. Multi PGM Mode
- 8. Clip Management
- 8.1 INTRODUCTION
- 8.2 USING THE EVS REMOTE PANEL
- 8.2.1 How to Create a Clip
- 8.2.2 Storing a Clip
- 8.2.3 Recalling a Clip
- 8.2.4 Playing Back a Clip
- 8.2.5 Recall and Playback of Growing clips
- 8.2.6 Clearing Clips
- 8.2.7 Copying or Moving Clips
- 8.2.8 How to Shorten a Clip
- 8.2.9 Secondary Menu in Clip Mode
- 8.2.10 Using the Clip screen
- 8.2.11 License Code
- 8.2.12 Clip screen – Standard View
- 8.2.13 The Title Bar
- 8.2.14 The Function Bar
- 8.2.15 The Clip Information Area
- 8.2.16 The Clip Management Area
- 8.2.17 Selecting a Clip with Tablet and Stylus
- 8.2.18 Selecting a Clip with the Keyboard
- 8.2.19 How to Name a Clip
- 8.2.20 How to Change the Primary Camera of a Clip
- 8.2.21 Recalling a Clip
- 8.2.22 How to Restripe the Timecode of the Current Clip
- 8.2.23 Moving and Copying Clips
- 8.2.24 Clip Screen – Extended View
- 8.3 USING THE VDR PANEL
- 9. Playlist Management
- 9.1 GENERAL INFORMATION
- 9.2 PLAYLIST MODES ON THE REMOTE PANEL
- 9.3 PLAYLIST DISPLAY ON THE VGA
- 9.4 ACTIVATING AND LOADING PLAYLISTS
- 9.5 DELETING PLAYLISTS
- 9.6 NAMING A PLAYLIST OR AN ELEMENT IN A PLAYLIST
- 9.7 BROWSING WITHIN A PLAYLIST
- 9.8 PLAYOUT FUNCTIONS AVAILABLE FOR PLAYLISTS
- 9.9 OVERVIEW OF EDITING FUNCTIONS IN PLAYLIST EDIT MODE
- 9.10 ADDING & REPLACING CLIPS IN A PLAYLIST
- 9.10.1 Possible Methods for Adding Clips
- 9.10.2 How to Quickly Add Clips to the Current Playlist
- 9.10.3 How to Insert Clips into a Playlist
- 9.10.4 Inserting Growing Clips into Playlists
- 9.10.5 How to Delete Playlist Elements from a Playlist
- 9.10.6 How to Move an Element Within a Playlist
- 9.10.7 How to Change the Camera Angle of a Playlist Element
- 9.11 COPYING PLAYLISTS
- 9.12 OTHER EDITING FUNCTIONS FOR PLAYLISTS
- 9.13 THE AUXILIARY AUDIO CLIP
- 9.14 TRANSITION EFFECTS
- 9.15 REPLACE FUNCTION

Issue
10.04.A
XTnano
–
Version 10.04
–
Operating Manual
EVS Broadcast Equipment SA – January 2011
86
9.15.3 REPLACE EDIT AND REPLACE PLAYBACK MODES
Similar to the playlist, the Replace function has two modes:
THE REPLACE EDIT MODE
This mode makes it possible to specify the following information for the Replace:
• IN point and OUT point, for the section to replace in the playlist. The OUT point
can also be defined during the Replace itself.
• Loop mode parameters. See also the section ‘Loop Mode in the Replace
Function’, on page 88.
In
the Replace Edit mode, the playlist is considered as one entity on which you
can mark one IN point and one OUT point (pressing the IN and OUT points does
not retrim the current playlist clip).
Those IN and OUT points will be used to determine what portion of the playlist will
be replaced.
THE REPLACE PLAYBACK MODE
In this mode, you play the playlist back and insert the new section between the
defined IN and OUT points.
After you have selected the required settings for the Replace function, the
Replace Playback mode is automatically activated: the playlist is cued before the
IN point (to create guardbands), ready to be initiated.
The playlist is played at the speed defined in the playlist but the lever can also be
used to vary the playback speed.
When the Protect OUT point of the clip is reached, a clip containing the IN and
OUT point with the guardbands is created on the Receive page defined in the
Setup menu. The loop is stopped and the user switches back to match frame edit
mode.
9.15.4 REPLACE WITH IN/OUT POINTS OR WITH IN POINT ONLY
You can perform a Replace action in two ways:
• by defining an IN and OUT points in the Replace Edit mode.
• by defining only an IN point in the Replace Edit mode, and defining the OUT
point while you perform the Replace in the Replace Playback mode.
For more information on how to perform a Replace, refer to the section ‘How to
P
erform a Replace’, on page 87.
Important
The IN and OUT points cannot be marked on a transition (the key will
flash red when it is the case).










