Polycom EF2241 用户手册

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T
ROUBLESHOOTING
© Polycom, Inc.
41
V
ORTEX
 EF2241
 
Reference Manual
talker to the microphone.  The microphone audio will most likely also be muddy 
and reverberant.  The installer or user may try to solve these microphone audio 
quality problems by turning up the microphone amplification, thus adding to the 
room gain.  This problem can be remedied by proper microphone selection 
(pickup pattern, directionality) and placement, coupled with proper microphone 
input calibration.
3. A third common cause of room gain problems is excessive coupling between 
loudspeaker audio and microphones.  This can be addressed by reducing the 
microphone coupling, either by positioning microphones so that their pickup pat-
terns are biased away from the loudspeaker audio (and direct reflections of loud-
speaker audio), repositioning loudspeakers, or reducing the loudspeaker 
amplification.
In summary, any amplification applied between the reference input and the micro-
phone inputs can add to room gain problems.  To avoid problems, ensure that the Ref-
erence input signal is not too low, and the microphone input signals are not too high.  
Run the built-in EF2241 Room Gain test to verify that you do not have room gain 
problems (See “Verify Room Gain” on page 14).
In-Conference 
Quick Check
If you experience residual echo problems during a conference, you can quickly check 
that the reference and microphone levels are calibrated and not causing room gain 
problems by using the Room Gain parameter (See “Verify Room Gain” on page 14).
If this excessive coupling activity level is evident on only one microphone input chan-
nel, that microphone channel should either be redirected to reduce coupling to loud-
speaker audio, or recalibrated as it will need to be turned down.  If the excessive 
coupling activity is observed on all (or most) microphone channels, then this indicates 
either that the room audio is too loud or the reference signal may need to be recali-
brated (this will be indicated by observing low activity levels on the S
IGNAL
 L
EVEL
 
M
ETER
).
Excessive 
Microphone 
Amplification
For the EF2241 to adapt effectively, saturation (overload or clipping) must not occur 
at the A/D converter supplying the microphone input.  Saturation introduces nonlin-
ear signal distortions into what the AEC expects is a linearly echoed version of the 
remote speech.
C
OMMON
 C
AUSES
 
OF
 E
XCESSIVE
 
R
OOM
 G
AIN
R
EMEDY
Excessive remote (reference) input 
amplification
Apply enough gain to the codec, phone 
or program audio inputs which will 
make up the Reference input signal.
Excessive microphone amplification
Select proper microphones for talker 
distance according to pickup pattern 
and directionality and properly cali-
brate mic inputs.
Excessive coupling between loud-
speaker audio and microphones
Reduce mic coupling by repositioning 
mics or loudspeakers, or by reducing 
loudspeaker amplification.
Table 3: Summary of Excessive Room Gain.