A WHEATNET IP SALVO SOLVED THIS PITA

Nowhere does Crawford work its STL codecs harder than in Denver, where WheatNet IP enabled Tieline Gateways manage four primary AM signals and four FM signals plus backup alternate IP routes. That’s a lot of eggs in one basket. A WheatNet IP salvo solved one PITA issue when switching to the backup Gateway 8. DOE Cris Alexander explains.

We have for some time now enjoyed using Wheatstone-enabled Tieline Gateway codecs as primary STL audio transports in several markets. It’s great to be able to route audio directly to and from these units, and their multi-unicast features and SmartStream Plus diversity backup feature provide for seamless transition to an alternate IP path if the primary path is lost or degraded.

Nowhere do we work our Gateways harder than in our Denver market, where we have not only four primary AM signals but also four FM signals plus backup alternate IP routes. The studio Gateway 8 has full-time outbound connections/streams for KLZ main and KLZ FM, both with SmartStream Plus backup; KLTT main and KLTT FM; KLVZ day, night, and night SmartStream plus backup; as well as KLVS 94.3, KLVZ 95.3 and KLVZ 95.3 FM SmartStream Plus backup; and finally, KLDC. We also have several inbound streams from the KLZ transmitter site for satellite feeds—all our C-band antennas and receivers are at the KLZ transmitter site, so add four mono inbound streams to the list.

That’s a lot of eggs in one basket, so we have a backup Gateway 8 in the rack, connected to both networks and ready to go with connection programs that duplicate everything in the main unit. Switching to the backup is simple: Log into both units, click connect on the backup and disconnect on the main. You’re back up with all signals in a few seconds. But there’s one small problem with that. When we switch to the backup unit, the backhauled satellite feeds are not routed in WheatNet IP where they need to go. We always had to do that manually, which is a PITA because they go several places as static routes and occasionally to a DRR channel as a dynamic, switched route. It sure would be nice if the routing would change with which Gateway is connected. It occurred to Amanda (Hopp, CE of Crawford Denver) and me as we were discussing this that there should be a way to fire a salvo in WheatNet with a Gateway connection. Amanda asked Tieline’s Jacob Daniluck about it and he pointed the way. It’s possible to set a “rule” in the Gateway so that a program, a connection or specific stream can trigger a Wheatstone SLIO, and he told us how to set that up. Now, when we go to the backup Gateway, as soon as the KLZ connection is made, it sets the static routes for the satellite backhaul. I’m still noodling on how to deal with the switched routes (DRR). I’m thinking a script in WheatNet… 

Reprinted from The Local Oscillator April 2025 issue, the newsletter of Crawford Broadcasting Company Corporate Engineering.

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