
PN 1000560 Rev B
Qt 300 Control Module
A. Barrel jack that connects the Control
Module to the power supply
D. Audio inputs including L, R, and GND
contacts
B. Zone connections with two runs per
zone
E. Contact-closure connections
C. Ethernet jack for PC connection F. Lock to preserve system settings
G. Power cord (standard wall outlet)
Qt AE Power Injector
A. Input Port - connect to Zone 2 on the
Control Module (CAT-3 or better)
D. Power throughput (not used in Demo
Kit)
B. Barrel-jack (power supply) E. Output Port - connect to input of an
Active Emitter (CAT-3 or better)
C. Power input (not used in Demo Kit)
Demo Setup
1. Connect the Ethernet jack on the Control Module to a PC.
2. On the Control Module, note the IP address (press the right button twice).
a. The default IP address is 169.254.1.1 when directly connected to a PC.
3. On the PC, type in this IP address in the browser bar. A login screen should
appear.
Basic Login:
USERNAME: admin PASSWORD: secret Volume, Schedule, Zone Control
Advanced Login:
USERNAME: admin PASSWORD: prosecret Equalization (plus above controls)
4. On the Administration tab:
• Name Zones 1 and 2 “Qt STD” and “Qt AE” respectively to reect how
emitters are wired.
• Fill in the service-provider info.
• Check the time, date, and time zone (reset if incorrect).
5. Load the PC (or other playback device).
6. Connect the PC or other device to audio Input A on the Control Module (item D in
the Qt 300 Control Module diagram).
7. Check the zone settings on the PC:
ZONE # (NAME)
Emitter Type
Spectrum Type
ZONE 1 (QT STD)
Standard
Qt Standard
ZONE 2 (QT AE)
Active Emitter
Qt Active
Sound Masking Demo
1. It is a best practice to have the sound masking system on before participants
arrive.
2. After 5-10 mins of sound masking demonstration, use the Contact Closure
Switch (item C on the cover diagram) to mute the masking. Ambient noise will
become apparent and is a potential distraction to the demonstration meeting.
3. Note the change in sound and make the following points:
• Sound masking reduces the intelligibility of adjacent conversations.
• Sound masking is generally unobtrusive.
4. To demonstrate the dierence between Standard and Active Emitters, turn the
volume o for one while listening to the other.
• Standard Emitters - masking only
• Active Emitters - masking, background music and paging