The PlexusAV P-AVN-2 IPMX Transceiver is a compact, efficient AV-over-IP device built for bandwidth-conscious environments. Supporting both encoding and decoding, it leverages open standards like IPMX alongside H.264 and H.265 compression to deliver low-latency, high-quality video and audio over 1Gbps networks. With advanced audio integration, multiple network interfaces, and a streamlined form factor, the P-AVN-2 offers seamless deployment across a wide range of AV applications-from campus-wide digital signage to live production and broadcast environments.
The P-AVN-2 is designed to meet the needs of modern AV deployments-from digital signage networks to complex multi-building AV systems. With support for open standards and advanced compression, it provides an cost-effective and scalable solution for bandwidth-sensitive environments across education, corporate, production, and public venues.
Applications:
• Educational and Corporate AV
• Digital Signage
• Live Production
• Visual Matrix Switching
• Broadcast and Production
What Is IPMX? (Internet Protocol Media Experience)
IPMX is the only true open standard for AV-over-IP, allowing products to be spec'd from multiple manufacturers. Being locked into a single ecosystem is the old-tech way of doing things, and that's why with PlexusAV, you never have to worry about spec'ing the wrong or right product - it just works thanks to IPMX. PlexusAV means 100% compatibility, reliability and performance.Is a proposed set of open standards and specifications to enable the carriage of compressed and uncompressed video, audio and data over IP networks for the pro AV market. It includes provisions for control, copy protection, connection management and security.
IPMX takes an open-standards approach to ensure that accessibility, ease of use, and implementation are available to all. The authors of its components come from organizations that represent the best interests of the pro AV market as a whole, rather than the interests of the few. This is in contrast to other solutions that, while calling themselves standards, are owned by a single entity that controls their intellectual property and usage, whether it is in the form of hardware, software, or a combination of the two. IPMX builds on foundational work from SMPTE, AWMA, and VSF.