White Paper: Dante/AES67-Native AV Matrix — Part 1: Eliminating the AV/IT Audio Divide

White Paper: Dante/AES67-Native AV Matrix — Part 1: Eliminating the AV/IT Audio Divide

White Paper — Part 1 of 2

Dante/AES67-Native AV Matrix Infrastructure

Eliminating the AV/IT Audio Divide with Flex Matrix Pro

Executive Summary

In most enterprise AV installations, audio is a second-class citizen. Video routing is handled by the matrix switcher. Audio routing is handled by a separate DSP, separate audio matrix, or analog cables no one fully documents. The result is two routing planes, two control interfaces, two firmware cycles, and two failure modes — all to distribute a single AV signal.

The KanexPro Flex Matrix Pro eliminates this division. Every I/O card — HDMI, DisplayPort, HDBaseT, Fiber, and 12G-SDI — ships with native Dante/AES67 audio networking built in at the card level. This white paper explains why that matters and how to design a Flex Matrix Pro installation that fully leverages it.

1. The Problem: Parallel AV Infrastructure

Traditional enterprise AV separates video and audio at the architectural level, creating four persistent operational problems:

  • Routing sync failures: Video routes to Display B while audio still points to Display A — one of the most common AV support calls in corporate environments.
  • Dante bridging cost: Adding Dante to a non-native matrix requires external AVIO hardware at every audio I/O point.
  • Control fragmentation: The video matrix, DSP, and audio matrix each have separate control APIs.
  • Double maintenance scope: Two independent systems to monitor, update, and troubleshoot.

Dante/AES67-native matrix switching addresses all four problems at the architectural level — not through workarounds, but by eliminating the separation between video and audio routing infrastructure.

2. Card-Level Dante: Why It Matters

In the Flex Matrix Pro, Dante/AES67 is implemented at the I/O card level — not chassis level. A chassis-level implementation provides a fixed number of Dante channels that don’t scale with I/O expansion. A card-level implementation scales Dante channel count directly with installed cards. Each card provides a dedicated Dante/AES67 network port, appears as an independent Dante device in Dante Controller, supports AES67, and is DDM compatible. A FLEX-PRO32X32 at full population appears as 16 independent Dante devices on the network.

3. Five Signal Formats with Native Dante

FormatCardsDante Note
HDMI 2.0FLEX-PROHDMI-IN / OUTHDMI embedded audio extracted at card — no breakout hardware
DisplayPort 1.2FLEX-PRODP-IN / OUTCritical for UC endpoints where DP dominates workstation connections
HDBaseT/CATFLEX-PROCAT-IN / OUT330ft over CAT6A. PoC on output powers TX units. Dante independent at card.
Fiber OpticFLEX-PROFIB-IN / OUTSM to 2km / MM to 300m. Dante extracted regardless of transmission distance.
12G-SDIFLEX-PROSDI-IN / OUTSDI embedded audio extracted at card — eliminates SDI de-embedder hardware

4. Chassis Sizing

ChassisMax I/OMax CardsMax Dante DevicesMSRP
FLEX-PRO16X1616×1688$14,999
FLEX-PRO32X3232×321616$24,999
FLEX-PRO64X6464×643232$59,999
FLEX-PRO128X128128×1286464$129,999

5. AES67 Interoperability

Flex Matrix Pro’s AES67 compliance enables direct audio exchange with Shure, Sennheiser, and Audio-Technica wireless systems; QSC, Biamp, and BSS DSPs; Yamaha and Allen & Heath consoles; and any AES67-compliant device — without analog or AES3 bridging hardware.

Related Resources