by synthjoe » Tue Nov 08, 2011 10:19 am
d8b 'out' should go to HDR 'in', then set (leave) the d8b to 'internal' and the HDR to 'word clock(bnc)'. Should work like that. The weird behaviour is kind of normal when the two devices are not synced, which is the case for you - even though there is a cable, it is connected to the wrong connectors and even if they were connected right, 'internal' sync on both ignores whatever clock signal flows on the cable. Good luck fixing it!
EDIT: sorry, I've missed out on Peter's post. I have not much experience with the HDR (it's been almost 10 years I last touched one), so I thought that d8b should be the master. I guess Peter is more experienced in this config, so go for the solution he suggested. HDR 'out' to d8b 'in', d8b set to 'word clock' and HDR to 'internal'. The difference between my previous recommendation (d8b master) and this (HDR master) is which device will be the clock reference. Both configurations work, the other device will follow, if setup like these. In your current configuration (both devices set to internal clock and cable connected incorrectly) both machines are run by their own internal clock and think they are the 'boss', irrespective of what the other device would like them to be synced to. This creates casual pops (when clock signals are skipped, or 'out of phase'), as no two disjunct clock signals are perfectly in time - hence the need to sync them. That's also why your earlier problem with the 4 kHz difference (distortion) could happen, because both devices were set up as masters (='internal') and ignored incoming sync signal , even if the BNC cable were connected correctly. Check cable connection and make sure the setup is matching either configuration, as described above.