June Meeting: SSL, IP Audio and Their Console-less Mixer

Says George Horton of SSL:

Audio-over-IP solutions are now in regular use around the world and in a wide range of critical applications. The installed sound market has been relying on IP transport for many years already, and now many broadcasters are implementing facility-wide AoIP technologies. This presentation covers how we are have reached the current technologies and how they are evolving. We will cover the current alphabet soup of acronyms and standards and finish up with a real word example of the technology in use.

For attendees’ interest, there will also be a range of Network IO solutions and the new ‘Console without an actual console’- SSL TCR- Tempest Control rack. A solution for remote flypack productions or fully automated broadcast facilities.

Join us for our regular monthly meeting Wednesday, June 21, at 12 noon at iHeartMedia, 9660 Granite Ridge Drive in San Diego. SSL will pick up the tab for pizza. As always, everyone is invited.

About George

George Horton, Vice President Western Region, Solid State Logic. Originally hailing from Oxford England, the hometown of Sold State Logic and has been with SSL for 29 years. From building consoles to testing, servicing, installing, training and now the commercial aspects of the Western United States.

About SSL

From groundbreaking audio consoles to innovative software and hardware solutions, Solid State Logic has evolved to become the world’s leading manufacturer of analog and digital audio consoles and provider of creative tools for Broadcast, Music, Film and Live Sound professionals.

With more than 3000 SSL-equipped studios and facilities operational today, the excellence of SSL consoles is universally recognized for unrivaled sonic quality, superb ergonomics, outstanding automation and an international support infrastructure second to none.

Matthew Wilson Anderson Moving to Los Angeles

iHeart Media Los Angeles cluster has hired Matthew Wilson Anderson from the San Diego cluster, so he’ll transfer effective July 1, 2017. Matt has served as SBE Chapter 36 Vice-chairman since November 2015.

Matt has served as an engineer at iHeart in San Diego since September 2014, doing everything from IT to transmitter work.

He’s also been an NFL Frequency Coordinator with the Chargers. He is expected to continue in that role in Los Angeles.

Matt said of his move, “I really loved my time in San Diego and I hope this isn’t my last time working in this market. I would like to thank John Rigg, Bill Thompson and everyone at iHeart Media that took the time to teach me. Day 1 started with ‘What do the filaments do?’ We’ve come a long way from there.”

The LA cluster includes five FM and three AM stations and is led by market Director of Engineer Doug Irwin.

Matt will be missed by his San Diego friends and colleagues.

FCC Issues Notice of Violation for Vista Pirate on 93.7 FM

The FCC issued a Notice of Violation after the Los Angeles office investigated a complaint of an illegal radio station on 93.7 MHz in the Vista, CA area. They used direction-finding techniques to locate an alleged pirate FM operation at the home of Lyle E Hilden, ham radio licensee KD6LUL.  An interesting twist on this violation was the tie-in with his ham license, with the NAL noting “The license for amateur radio station KD6LUL does not authorize operation on the broadcast frequency 93.7 MHz.”

May 17th Meeting: Sencore and Technology to Help Your Station

If you’re old enough, you remember Sencore as the company that in the 1960’s made quality capacitor checkers and vacuum tube testers. During the digital TV transition, they introduced a cool, modular demodulator adopted by the thousands. They’ve taken it to the next level in the past few years. I have a client with a Sencore satellite IRD that has a streaming IP output and great signal diagnostics and logging.

Jay Gedanken, who represents Sencore in the southwestern U.S., visits Chapter 36 this month to discuss some of the technology you might consider for your broadcast plant. If you’re uplinking to satellite, the FCC is requiring you to have a new carrier ID in place, and he’ll talk about that. Sencore has an end-to-end plant data system monitoring solution called “Videobridge” that he plans to discuss, as well as various methods of transporting video.

Join us Wednesday, May 17th, at 12 noon at KGTV, 4600 Air Way, San Diego. Jay will buy us lunch in the cafeteria, then we’ll have an hourlong presentation with Q & A.

About Jay

Jay Gedanken has been with Sencore for the past two years. He started his career as an electronics engineer, but moved into technical sales, where you might know him from his time in San Diego at Adtec, Scopus, CBW Systems, and Optibase.

NAB Show 2017 as Seen by San Diego Engineers

A number of San Diego broadcast engineers got away for a few days to the NAB Show in Las Vegas and came back with some good impressions of technology advances on display there.

Chris Aamodt of KFMB Stations said, “The new Volicon products are impressive and much easier to use than previous models.”

Leon Messenie of KPBS responded, “The only thing I saw different was the Ross Graphite.  It is a new low-cost production system to go after the Tri-Caster market.

“I spent most all of my time looking at TV and radio automation systems, Items for the FCC repack, and production automation systems. These are projects active at KPBS.”

Scottie Rice of KSDS made a few picks:

“The new SAS iSL with OLED displays and programmable LED switch colors. It is the combination of quality and sex appeal! The Premium SR color on it also makes it durable, as well as functional. The new iSL is the hit of the show.

“The new Wheatstone Air Aura X4 processor with the multipath mitigation software is absolutely superb. Its loudness and functionality are amazing.

“The product that everyone has been waiting for is the new Nautel Importer/Exporter all in one box. With the extraordinary quality and service of Nautel, it is on KSDS’ wish list for next year to replace our old Harris HDI-100 and HDE-200.

“The mic/recorder from Yellowtek is quite superb. As our SS portable recorders are dying here at the college I intend on replacing them with the Yellowtek. Quite a nice product, established, and the German engineering is quite superb.”

Matthew Anderson of iHeartMedia added, “Especially with the TV repack coming up, there was a lot of good information from vendors and those in the know about what is the real future for wireless mic use.

“One great feature of the NAB is to meet the engineers behind the products you love. Bugs, features, and enhancement requests were all talked about. I talked with Aaron, working with SAS and our conversations sparked a project we are going to work on to add older Telos system interoperability to the SAS Phone Controller.”

Bill Eisenhamer of Entercom said, “Truth be told I was not impressed by much there.  I already own the Tieline Via used for baseball.  We look at most anything IP-based. I am interested in the AVT phone system. Comrex is trying, but seems to be missing the point of who their end users are. That’s about it from me.”

This year I concentrated mostly on RF products and spent time holding down a booth, so my impressions were limited:

Synegy showed a low-cost IP-based modular master control playout system that appeared easy-to-use, stable and mature.

GatesAir showed its Maxiva liquid-cooled and air-cooled high-efficiency TV transmitters with impressive remote control and monitoring options. They can work with either ATSC-1 or ATSC-3, or any number of international standards like DVB-T2. Its clean layout seemed to be designed for ease of service.

California-based antenna manufacturer Jampro offers a number of solutions for TV spectrum repacking projects, including a nice circular polarization panel antenna and broadband slots for all power levels.

I checked out the 8K video technology display at NHK. I swear, every time I see one of these demos, I think they’ve finally come to the peak of technology’s ability to recreate a real-life visual experience, and every time it just gets better. This demo had 23 audio speakers to envelope you in the concert experience. My neighbor commented that “we ARE in this symphony!” Yeah, it was that good. Not currently transmittable in real-time over consumer-friendly paths, but I wouldn’t bet against it in the future.

Similarly, Harmonic showed an impressive 8K demo using their compression equipment and digital media. The color is astoundingly realistic. They have ATSC 3.0-ready multiplexer/encoders ready-to-ship.

Society of Broadcast Engineers