WORLD AIRLINE ENTERTAINMENT ASSOCIATION TECHNOLOGY COMMITTEE WAEA SPECIFICATION

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WORLD AIRLINE ENTERTAINMENT ASSOCIATION TECHNOLOGY COMMITTEE WAEA SPECIFICATION 1289-2 Specification for Mastertape Recording, Tape Duplication, Compact Disc Replication, and Digital Encoding for Airborne Audio Entertainment Systems Revision 3 January 20, 2005 2005 World Airline Entertainment Association The World Airline Entertainment Association (WAEA) is the author and creator of this specification for the purpose of copyright and other laws in all countries throughout the world. The WAE A copyright notice must be included in all reproductions, whether in whole or in part, and may not be deleted or attributed to others. The WAEA hereby grants to its members and their suppliers a limited license to reproduce this specification for their own use, provided it is not sold. Others should obtain permission to reproduce this specification from WAEA Headquarters, Attn: Executive Director, c/o Association Management Group, 8201 Greensboro Drive, Suite 300., McLean, Virginia 22102 USA; (703) 610-9000 voice, (703) 610-9005 facsimile.

IMPORTANT NOTICES This document is a specification adopted by the World Airline Entertainment Association (WAEA). This document may be revised by the WAEA. It is intended solely as a guide for companies interested in developing products which can be compatible with other products developed using this document. WAEA makes no representation or warranty regarding this document, and any company using this document shall do so at its sole risk, including specifically the risks that a product developed will not be compatible with any other product or that any particular performance will not be achieved. WAEA shall not be liable for any exemplary, incidental, proximate or consequential damages or expenses arising from the use of this document. This document defines only one approach to compatibility, and other approaches may be available to the industry. This document is an authorized and approved publication of WAEA. Only WAEA has the right and authority to revise or change the material contained in this document, and any revisions by any party other than WAEA are unauthorized and prohibited. Compliance with this document may require use of one or more features covered by proprietary rights (such as features which are the subject of a patent, patent application, copyright, mask work right or trade secret right). By publication of this document, no position is taken by WAEA with respect to the validity or infringement of any patent or other proprietary right. WAEA hereby expressly disclaims any liability for infringement of intellectual property rights of others by virtue of the use of this document. WAEA has not and does not investigate any notices or allegations of infringement prompted by publication of any WAEA document, nor does WAEA undertake a duty to advise users or potential users of WAEA documents of such notices or allegations. WAEA hereby expressly advises all users or potential users of this document to investigate and analyze any potential infringement situation, seek the advice of intellectual property counsel, and, if indicated, obtain a license under any applicable intellectual property right or take the necessary steps to avoid infringement of any intellectual property right. WAEA expressly disclaims any intent to promote infringement of any intellectual property right by virtue of the evolution, adoption, or publication of this document.

1.0 This document establishes guidelines for the recording, duplication, replication, and digital encoding of program master tapes for airborne audio systems. Where applicable, specifications are with reference to the NAB Standard "Magnetic Tape Recording and Reproducing" (April 1965), issued by the Engineering Department of the National Association of Broadcasters, CD Avionics Specification: 1994, and ISO/IEC 11172-3, Coding of Moving Pictures and Associated Audio for Digital Storage Media. 2.0 PROGRAM MASTERTAPES, ANALOGUE 2.1 Audio recording tape used shall be mastering quality supplied to the duplicator on 10 1/2 inch diameter NAB reels, tails out, flat packed. 2.2 Tape width shall be 1/4 inch. 2.3 Mastertape speed shall be 7.5 ips (19cms) or 15 ips (38 cms). 2.4 Track format shall be 2, 1/2 tracks. For stereo recordings, left channel information shall be recorded on Track 1, right channel information on Track 2. Both tracks shall be recorded in phase. All monaural programs shall be recorded on Track 1. 2.5 The program material shall be preceded by 2 recorded reference tones. 2.5.1 A 700 Hz tone, 30 sec duration, at the reference flux level. A 10 khz tone, 30 sec duration, recorded 10 db lower than the reference flux level. 2.5.2 Operationally, a standard reference level may be established as follows: Reference flux level is a 700 Hz sine wave recorded at a level 8 db below the level that will produce 3% third harmonic distortion. 3.0 PROGRAM MASTERTAPES, DIGITAL 3.1 Audio recording tape used shall be digital audio tape (R-DAT) cassette. 3.2 Mastertape speed shall be 8.150 mm/sec or 12.225 mm/sec (usually automatically selected). 3.3 Sample Frequency shall be 44.1 khz. 3.4 Left channel information shall be recorded on CHANNEL 1; right channel information shall be recorded on CHANNEL 2. 3.5 The program material shall be preceded by a 1 khz reference tone, 30 seconds in duration, recorded at a level of - 18 VU referenced to digital zero, with input from 0 VU at +4 dbm.

3.6 Peak recorded levels shall not exceed digital zero causing overload indicators to illuminate. 4.0 PRE-RECORDED ANNOUNCEMENT MASTERS 4.1 Compliance with all sections of 2.0 and 3.0 is required dependent upon whether the master is analogue or digital. 4.2 Acceptable master formats: Digital Audio Tape (DAT) Compact Disc (CDDA) Analogue Reel to Reel 4.3 Masters shall be free form excessive "s", "sh", or "tsh" sounds that may cause sibilance in the target format from subsequent generation distortion. 4.4 Master dynamic range shall not exceed 40 db. 4.5 Preceding each announcement, a slate shall be recorded in a language appropriate for use by the post-production studio, stating the name of the announcement, the language in which it is recorded, and the duration (min, sec) of the announcement. 4.6 Accompanying each announcement mastertape shall be a printed table of contents, in a language appropriate for use by the post-production studio, specifying the name of the announcement, the language in which it is recorded, and the duration (min, sec) of the announcement. 5.0 TAPE DUPLICATIONS 5.1 These parameters describe the audio signal, measured at the output of the audio reproducer or the input to the main multiplex, which will offer optimum sound reproduction throughout the aircraft. 5.2 Audio Signal Reference Level: Reference flux levels are not compatible for all entertainment systems. Thus, the appropriate flux level must be referenced to produce a maximum signal level of '0' dbm at the ARU output, also defined as 1 milliwatt applied to a 600 ohm impedance. 5.3 The average signal level shall be 8 to 10 db below the maximum signal level. 5.4 The entire audio signal should "fit" within the envelope produced by the peak-topeak value (0 dbm = 2.2 v pp) of the maximum signal level when viewed on an

oscilloscope screen. Music is a very complex waveform containing sharp transients of short duration. Occasional transient peaks to 3.5 v pp are acceptable provided their duration is less than 10 msec. 5.5 The dynamic range should be held to 40 db maximum. This is accomplished in the production mastering process through the use of compressors whose threshold and ratio controls are varied to achieve a maximum 40 db dynamic range without the "pumping" or "breathing" sound attributed to excessive compression. 5.6 The manufacturer of the entertainment system establishes the reproduction equalization curves. Thus, the appropriate NAB record equalization curve must be selected for the dubbing process to yield a frequency response of 50 Hz to 15 khz +/-3 db. 5.7 To ensure the audibility of the entire audio signal, the signal-to-noise ratio must be held to 45 db minimum, referenced to the maximum signal level throughout the 50 Hz to 15 khz bandwidth. 5.8 Crosstalk shall not exceed 45db between any two adjacent recorded tracks. 6.0 COMPACT DISC FORMATS 6.1 Compact Disc Digital Audio (CDDA) 6.1.1 CDDA audio discs are 16 bit resolution, 44.1 khz sample rate. Reference: Sony- Phillips Redbook Standard. 6.2 Compact Disc Interactive 6.2.1 Audio content shall be encoded using Adaptive Delta Pulse Code Modulation (ADPCM). 6.2.2 CDI discs for aircraft players shall be recorded in one of three levels defined by the Sony-Phillips Green Book Standard. 6.2.2.1 Level A 8 bit resolution, 37.8 khz sample rate 6.2.2.2 Level B 4 bit resolution, 37.8 khz sample rate 6.2.2.3 Level C 4 bit resolution, 18.9 khz sample rate 6.2.3 Level C is acceptable for spoken word content only. 6.2.4 Disc Capacity per level (maximum)

6.2.4.1 Level A 4 hours 6.2.4.2 Level B 8 hours 6.2.4.3 Level C 16 hours 6.2.5 Compact Discs shall be encoded to provide one of the following configurations: 2 stereo channels 4 mono channels 1 stereo channel, 2 mono channels 1 stereo channel, extended play 2 mono channels, extended play 6.2.6 It is acceptable for channels on a disc to remain blank if they are not electrically connected to a PCU channel or to the overhead speaker system. 6.3 During the encoding process, trigger bits shall be inserted for program turning point, and for end of program. The bits are coded as '1' at least ten sectors before the turning point and the end of program. Reference "CD Avionics Specification: 1994" for bit allocation. 6.4 The dynamic range for ADPCM encoded content should be held to 40 db maximum. 6.5 The standard record level is -14 dbfs to yield an ARINC standard ARU output level of '0' dbm defined as 1 milliwatt applied to a 600 ohm impedance. 7.0 ENCODED AUDIO FILES (Reference Document ISO/IEC 11172-3) First Edition 1993 7.1 For audio programs, compilation or compact disc format, that are encoded for aircraft file servers using the MPEG 1 algorithm in Layer 1, 2, or 3: 7.1.1 No signal emphasis shall be used prior to encoding. 7.1.2 Cyclical Redundancy Check (CRC) shall not be used.

7.1.3 Sample Rate of 44.1 khz shall be used. 7.1.4 Dynamic range of encoded content shall not exceed 40 db. 7.1.5 Program reference level for source shall be -12 db below full scale (digital clip) with no transient peaks in excess of -4 dbfs. 7.2 Bitrates: MODE MINIMUM MAXIMUM 7.2.1 MPEG 1, Layer 1 7.2.2 MPEG 1, Layer 2 7.2.3 MPEG 1, Layer 3 Single Channel or Joint Stereo 128 kbps 448 kbps Dual Channel or Independent Stereo 256 kbps 448 kbps Single Channel or Joint Stereo 128 kbps 384 kbps Dual Channel or Independent Stereo 256 kbps 384 kbps Single Channel or Joint Stereo 128 kbps 320 kbps Dual Channel or Independent Stereo 256 kbps 320 kbps 7.2.4 For Layer 1, 2, or 3, 56 kbps is acceptable for spoken word content only. 7.3 For hardware systems requiring transport streams, the audio file shall be multiplexed in accordance with ISO/IEC 13818-1: 1995. 7.4 File names and extensions are not standardized for all hardware systems. The manufacturer must specify their convention for character count, limitations, and file extension codes.