Lake Controller Operation Manual Version 1.7.0
Lake Controller Operation Manual Rev 1.7.0
Modules Menu Reference
137 
Sample Rate
Dante may operate at either 48 kHz or 96 kHz; tap the appropriate button to select the preferred sample 
rate. For products supporting AES67, when AES67 mode is enabled, the device can only operate at 48 kHz.
Dante Device Name
The Copy Frame Label button copies the Frame label into the Dante Device Name parameter for this device; 
after tapping this button, click OK on the on-screen keyboard to conrm the change. Alternatively the 
keyboard icon may be selected to display the keyboard for manual Dante Device Name entry.
If the Dante Device Name is changed after another 
device has already subscribed using the previous 
name, the existing audio connection with be lost 
and the other device will need to subscribe again.
When recalling a system le created before 
Lake Controller v6.1, the legacy DLP-XX-XX device 
names are restored to retain Dante subscriptions.
This parameter is synchronized between the Lake Controller and the Dante Controller. This can also be done 
for all frames in the system from the Global Control tab.
Device Latency Options
This latency is additional Dante-specic latency used to ensure uninterrupted digital audio. The latency is 
added to the normal latency of your chosen signal path and Module type. 
The following latencies are available dependent on the device:
 ▸ LM, PLM+ and D Series (Gigabit Ethernet): 0.25ms / 0.50ms / 1.00ms / 2.00ms / 5.00ms
 ▸ PLM Series (100 Mbit Ethernet): 1.00ms / 2.00ms / 5.00ms 
This parameter is synchronized between the Lake Controller and the Dante Controller.
Dante latency values changed in Lake Controller v6.1. 
When recalling a system le created before 
Lake Controller v6.1, previous Dante latency options will 
be converted, rounding up to the nearest latency value.
These minimum receive latency options are provided to allow exibility depending on the network complex-
ity and architecture. Higher latency reduces the risk of audio glitches due to audio packets being delayed 
via the network, and is therefore recommended for complex networks containing many hops, or in circum-
stances where a small delay is irrelevant and reliability is paramount.
Using Ethernet switches without Quality of Service 
(QoS) is not recommended. If QoS is unavailable, use 
the 5 ms latency option on all devices to reduce the risk 
of audio glitches.










