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BBC NQHD (Not Quite HD) and likely to remain so.
On Fri, 17 Sep 2010 19:06:50 +0100, Tony Quinn
wrote: In message , Zathras writes On Fri, 17 Sep 2010 08:07:47 +0100, Alan wrote: On Fri, 17 Sep 2010 07:04:46 +0100, Mark Carver wrote: . . .once you'd put the faders the other way round ;-) Didn't radio and television faders work in opposite directions? ..and VT ones worked fully open where Radio ones didn't.. But you didn't want all three fully open eh? -- Z |
BBC NQHD (Not Quite HD) and likely to remain so.
In article , Alan White
writes On Fri, 17 Sep 2010 07:04:46 +0100, Mark Carver wrote: . . .once you'd put the faders the other way round ;-) Didn't radio and television faders work in opposite directions? Nope. And (as of last year) there was at least one desk in live nightly TV use in the BBC that has faders the sensible way round (i.e. shut away from you). It was a joy to behold, but the switchover was a classic example of market share triumphing over common sense. Now where have we heard of that recently? I might have mentioned DAB, and digital TV, and shortscreen (and...), but I think I got away with it. Cheers, Nedd. -- SimonM ----- TubeWiz.com ----- Video making/uploading that's easy to use & fun to share Try it today! (now with DFace blurring) |
BBC NQHD (Not Quite HD) and likely to remain so.
In article , Tony Quinn
writes In message , Zathras writes On Fri, 17 Sep 2010 08:07:47 +0100, Alan wrote: On Fri, 17 Sep 2010 07:04:46 +0100, Mark Carver wrote: . . .once you'd put the faders the other way round ;-) Didn't radio and television faders work in opposite directions? ..and VT ones worked fully open where Radio ones didn't.. But you didn't want all three fully open Meanwhile, in dubbing, I had to get my daily fix of insert edit buzz... Incidentally, whilst tidying up earlier today, I came across a news item in Wireless World (April 1963, p.169) about an Ampex VR-1500 that looks like a two-inch _helical_scan_ machine. The technical details are scant, presumably straight from a press release, and give no details of the format except: linear tape speed 5"/sec, 525/625 lines "designed for closed-circuit television recording" It doesn't sound like it was aimed at broadcast, but even so, I didn't know anyone made a production 2" helical system. Weird or wot? (later, post Googling) Apparently it was a forerunner of a 2" helical system that did do colour and was used professionally in the US. I wonder if it did insert edits? -- SimonM ----- TubeWiz.com ----- Video making/uploading that's easy to use & fun to share Try it today! (now with DFace blurring) |
BBC NQHD (Not Quite HD) and likely to remain so.
On Sat, 18 Sep 2010 12:09:40 +0100, SpamTrapSeeSig
wrote: Didn't radio and television faders work in opposite directions? Nope. In the '60s? -- Alan White Mozilla Firefox and Forte Agent. Twenty-eight miles NW of Glasgow, overlooking Lochs Long and Goil in Argyll, Scotland. Webcam and weather:- http://windycroft.co.uk/weather |
BBC NQHD (Not Quite HD) and likely to remain so.
In article , Alan White
writes On Sat, 18 Sep 2010 12:09:40 +0100, SpamTrapSeeSig wrote: Didn't radio and television faders work in opposite directions? Nope. In the '60s? Before my time, but I think TV at LG used Type-B which would've been rotary. Type-C & D were the right way round (Painton quadrants). Stop 20 (normal) was intended to be on a radius to the mixer's eyes. The M-series Calrec desk, circa 1988, had optional specially made quadrants, I think by P+G, with a flat track beneath and 'pretend' quadrants above, with a complex mechanical coupling. This was the first pic. I found on-line: http://www.gearslutz.com/board/attac...d1283656469-sh ow-your-consoles-calrec-dark-sml-1.jpg, but these look turned-round. -- SimonM ----- TubeWiz.com ----- Video making/uploading that's easy to use & fun to share Try it today! (now with DFace blurring) |
BBC NQHD (Not Quite HD) and likely to remain so.
On Sat, 18 Sep 2010 13:41:26 +0100, SpamTrapSeeSig
wrote: Before my time, but I think TV at LG used Type-B which would've been rotary. Type-C & D were the right way round (Painton quadrants). Stop 20 (normal) was intended to be on a radius to the mixer's eyes. It may be that my seventy-three year old brain is at fault but I have a nagging doubt... :-) -- Alan White Mozilla Firefox and Forte Agent. Twenty-eight miles NW of Glasgow, overlooking Lochs Long and Goil in Argyll, Scotland. Webcam and weather:- http://windycroft.co.uk/weather |
BBC NQHD (Not Quite HD) and likely to remain so.
In article , Alan White
writes On Sat, 18 Sep 2010 13:41:26 +0100, SpamTrapSeeSig wrote: Before my time, but I think TV at LG used Type-B which would've been rotary. Type-C & D were the right way round (Painton quadrants). Stop 20 (normal) was intended to be on a radius to the mixer's eyes. It may be that my seventy-three year old brain is at fault but I have a nagging doubt... :-) Dubbing at LG was right-way-round (but in my day Theatre 2 and the East Tower were all rotaries!). Dunno about TMS, but I think it had SSL so was probably wrong way round. VT were a law unto themselves (antilog???), then there were those twin-track Studers with faders on, and RD4/4s (in radio), IIRC they opened upwards. -- SimonM ----- TubeWiz.com ----- Video making/uploading that's easy to use & fun to share Try it today! (now with DFace blurring) |
BBC NQHD (Not Quite HD) and likely to remain so.
On Sat, 18 Sep 2010 18:01:31 +0100, SpamTrapSeeSig
wrote: Dubbing at LG was right-way-round (but in my day Theatre 2 and the East Tower were all rotaries!). Dunno about TMS, but I think it had SSL so was probably wrong way round. VT were a law unto themselves (antilog???), then there were those twin-track Studers with faders on, and RD4/4s (in radio), IIRC they opened upwards. I don't think we're discussing the same thing. I was comparing desks in radio studios and desks in the sound control room of television studios. -- Alan White Mozilla Firefox and Forte Agent. Twenty-eight miles NW of Glasgow, overlooking Lochs Long and Goil in Argyll, Scotland. Webcam and weather:- http://windycroft.co.uk/weather |
BBC NQHD (Not Quite HD) and likely to remain so.
In article , Alan White
writes On Sat, 18 Sep 2010 18:01:31 +0100, SpamTrapSeeSig wrote: Dubbing at LG was right-way-round (but in my day Theatre 2 and the East Tower were all rotaries!). Dunno about TMS, but I think it had SSL so was probably wrong way round. VT were a law unto themselves (antilog???), then there were those twin-track Studers with faders on, and RD4/4s (in radio), IIRC they opened upwards. I don't think we're discussing the same thing. I was comparing desks in radio studios and desks in the sound control room of television studios. In that case: BBC-way-round throughout (unless post 1990 installation or SSL who, IIRC, refused to do a 'BBC version' of the 500 series and beyond). As I said, I know of at least one Calrec desk (in service last year) that still maintained the tradition. 'Push-to-open' is a pain in a live situation, as it's ergonomically very limiting. The other way, you can pre-fade and fade up to normal without looking at the fader at all (even easier with quadrants), and mechanical control (of fingers and muscles) gets better as you approach normal stop. You can't easily knock faders off the back stop by accident, and parallax is reduced (assuming you have a scribble strip or ident display above the fader below the channel strip). I honestly can't see any validity to commercial-way-round faders, even in live music. It's often claimed that you want a 'graphic' display of levels, but even there, if you're using the desk's gain properly, the faders should be somewhere near normal stop anyway. Once you get below 50% travel on a 'log-B' carbon-track fader, resolution becomes very coarse and subtlety is very hard to achieve. Give me BBC-way-round quadrants any day, even the studded variety! Cheers, S. -- SimonM ----- TubeWiz.com ----- Video making/uploading that's easy to use & fun to share Try it today! (now with DFace blurring) |
BBC NQHD (Not Quite HD) and likely to remain so.
SpamTrapSeeSig wrote:
.... And (as of last year) there was at least one desk in live nightly TV use in the BBC that has faders the sensible way round (i.e. shut away from you). It was a joy to behold, but the switchover was a classic example of market share triumphing over common sense. .... Without wishing to start a (hopefully not inevitable) religious war, why is shut away from you the sensible way round? I never had any problems with desks where you push to open the channel, in my very limited broadcasting experience. In a Cessna 172, I push the throttle knob if I want more power. And so on... I'm hoping for a reply on the lines of "Yes, but Insert simple killer argument here" I'm trying to remember which way the faders went on the mixers when I worked for Rupert Neve back in 1978. I think they were all up to open? -- Phil Liverpool, UK |
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