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| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Patchbays: does your Mic need 10 cables to reach the A/D? | jindrich | So much gear, so little time! | 8 | 8th May 2006 11:42 PM |
| Getting Digital Feet Wet | goom | Low End Theory | 1 | 18th November 2005 09:23 PM |
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| | #1 |
| Super Moderator Join Date: Aug 2002 Location: NYC
Posts: 4,880
| A couple of years ago, we did a gig that needed 750 to 1000 feet of audio snake, so went active. Back on January 12th & 13th 2001, Aura Sonic Ltd (ASL) recorded and broadcasted the Netherlands Metropole Orchestra w/ the Brecker Bros. live from the IAJE convention in NYC. The concerts where aired in the Netherlands and Europe via ISDN lines from the ASL mobile audio truck. The first concert on Friday which included the Brecker Brothers was at the Grand Ballroom of the Hilton. This show was recorded to be aired the following day. The second concert on Saturday was at Sheraton's Imperial Ballroom and aired live. Friday's taped show followed the live concert performance. The Netherlands Programme Service and music mix engineer, Gert De Bruijn did not want to move the mobile unit or use two different control rooms for a number of valid reasons. They also did not want to use a portable flypack system at one venue and an audio truck parked at the other space. Even two remote trucks parked on 53rd was not good enough for them. They asked me if I can figure out a way to pull it off. I had my work cut out for me. I was seriously considering the Aphex 1788 remote mic pres (line level out) to the truck or use the digital out option via QSC's Rave digital system (64 channels plus control) etc. We ended up using our 48 channel XTA active mic/line splitter system thru 750 plus feet of Whirlwind MASS (W4) snakes. We connected (3) 250' and some shorty snakes and flew the cable from the roof of the Hilton (fifth floor) on the North side of 53rd street over to the South side of 53rd where the ASL Mobile Audio truck was parked for Saturday's live show at the Sheraton. We tested the system in the shop and it worked perfectly. No signal loss or fidelity issues were present. I was prepared to use our 48 channel API 3124 mic pre rig to drive the 750 plus feet of cable line level if the XTA's didn't sound right. There were roughly 66 to 70 microphone inputs y'd to 48 channels on each stage. We set up 48 channels of the XTA DS800's at each location and just swoped out the snake runs at the truck's input panel. The XTA DS800's had plenty of headroom, so we went with them and were very happy we did! The live broadcast across the pond worked out flawlessly and everyone was happy we didn't have to use different recording systems or move the truck from one side of the street to the other. If you have enough level at the head end of the snake you should never have a problem driving long cable runs. You can run thousands of feet of cable line level without loss, so 750 plus feet was nothing on this project. What's the furthest you ran a mic cable, passive and or active?
__________________ Steve Remote AuraSonicLtd.com the home of ASL Mobile & Location Production Remoteness on the Linkedin Network Remoteness on Myspace |
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| | #2 | |
| One with big hooves | Being mostly a studio guy probably about 50 to 75' not including the snake between the live room and control room which is another 25'. I started thinking one day about how many feet of cable a signal runs through from the time someone plays a note or sings before we mix it and it pops out of the speakers on someones stereo. Scary stuff.
__________________ J. 'Moose' Kahrs producer|mixer|recordist MooseAudio.net Quote:
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| | #3 |
| Super Moderator Join Date: Aug 2002 Location: NYC
Posts: 4,880
| How about remote mic pres and running them line level back to the control room? Even if you cannot afford remote pre's, mic pre's in the studio can be a wonderful thing. Your assistant can tweak them until they're proper with just the right amount of headroom and you're rockin'.
__________________ Steve Remote AuraSonicLtd.com the home of ASL Mobile & Location Production Remoteness on the Linkedin Network Remoteness on Myspace |
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| | #4 |
| Gear maniac | running you mic-preamps on the stage/control room - and having an assistant set the gain structure is always another route, might require a two-way radio to get fancy...
__________________ Jay Crouch Crouch@optonline.net 203-521-9520 |
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| | #5 | ||
| One with big hooves | Quote:
__________________ J. 'Moose' Kahrs producer|mixer|recordist MooseAudio.net Quote:
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| | #6 |
| Super Moderator Join Date: Aug 2002 Location: NYC
Posts: 4,880
| Two years post this thread and I'm still using copper... How about you folks?
__________________ Steve Remote AuraSonicLtd.com the home of ASL Mobile & Location Production Remoteness on the Linkedin Network Remoteness on Myspace |
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| | #7 |
| Gear addict Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: southeast
Posts: 495
| About a year ago I decided to upgrade cable and run line level only from the stage. The micpres were adequate already (Precision 8s) and feeding it down 180ft of Mogami AES made a startling improvement in clarity. In the next few months I will be going to a new rig from Crispin at Crookwood that has 16 channels in a 4u panel with built-in A/D and remote controlled parameters. I'll give a listening test report if anyone is curious. Rich |
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| | #8 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Jun 2002 Location: uh..... Hollywood
Posts: 1,170
| Interesting, I've given serious thought to setting up my location rig to facilitate placing mic preamps adjacent to the stage with the run back to the recording location at line level. The vast majority of my jobs involve cable runs of under 100ft, usually less than 50. So I am not worried about loss of level as much as I am susceptibility to interference. (anything from fluorescent lighting to refrigerator motors, etc.) My thought being that line level signals would be less likely to be negatively impacted by these sorts of interference than mic level signals. (nothing like applying 70dB of gain to the noise of an electrical motor ) While remote control preamps would be nice, they are certainly not a requirement for this type of setup. But there are many little details to think about when "remoting" the preamps. Little things like the fact that you can no longer power all of your gear from a single circuit. (which is normally one of my firm rules when setting up my gear on location)
__________________ steve Lexington 125 - High Resolution Location Recording lex125@pacbell.net http://www.lexington125.com |
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| | #9 |
| Super Moderator Join Date: Aug 2002 Location: NYC
Posts: 4,880
| Not necessarily... When we place our mic preamps or active splitter near the mics on stage, we almost always run an AC line to the amps fed from our isolated & conditioned power source. I'm not really worried about interference from our power run. We're running line level and the amount of current the amps draw is minimal. IMO, it's all good... In this scenario you can never go wrong running line level back to the control room.
__________________ Steve Remote AuraSonicLtd.com the home of ASL Mobile & Location Production Remoteness on the Linkedin Network Remoteness on Myspace |
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| | #10 |
| Gear maniac Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 152
| My experience is very close to Hollywood Steve. For the acoustic location stuff I do, 100' has always gotten me out of the performance room into a nearby space of some kind. It is getting time for a 8ch pre, and the Grace remote pre's look interesting for the stated reasons. Any experience? |
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| | #11 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Apr 2003 Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 2,299
| I usually try to stay within a single 100' run when I set up... That said, sometimes it is stretched where the 100 feet is to the main box and then there are either long cables on the stage or subsnakes running to that box. That can make a run 150' or more sometimes from mic to recorer-land... --Ben |
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| | #12 | |
| Gear addict Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: southeast
Posts: 495
| Quote:
Rich | |
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| | #13 |
| Gear Head Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: Maryland
Posts: 50
| This is an interesting topic because lately, I have been researching "digital" CAT5 /fiber snakes for my remote production clients. These are now available from over a half dozen manufacturers with varying capabilities from full remote control with remote processing (expensive) to straight forward copper replacements. These include such products as the QSC Rave system. But the two most interesting (and least expensive) systems are new products. Light Viper http://lightviper.com and AudioRail http://audiorail.home.comcast.net/simple.htm While the Light Viper uses what looks like a standard stage box with premaps built in, the AudioRail allows you to use nearly any preamp.
__________________ Beware: I am both an equipment vendor and an audio engineer. Marty Atias ATS Communications http://ATSComms.com |
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| | #14 |
| Gear addict Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: southeast
Posts: 495
| As I see it, the problem with fiber optic is that it cannot be repaired; coax can, however. CAT5 ain't cheap (at least something good like Belden Mediatwist). Surely there are more efficient options than multiway! Rich |
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| | #15 |
| Gear Head Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: Maryland
Posts: 50
| CAT 5 expensive? MEdiatwist CAT6 can be had for about $.15 / foot, and the ruggedized DataTuff CAT5 can be had for under $.22 per foot. What do you pay for your copper snake cable? Fiber costs as little as $.20 per foot. BTW, you can't "fix" CAT5 other than by connectorizing it, but fiber can certainly be repaired. People splice fibers every day. It's not easy, but nwither is fixing 19 pairs of copper either! With up to 64 channels on a single pipe or cable they seem pretty efficient to me! These systems are also networkable. Meaning you can extend or daisy chain any number of channels to additional I/O boxes. From stage to monitor, to FOH to truck on a single run! Some of these systems offer remote control over their built-in preamps as well Another interesting system is the Digigram Ethersound.
__________________ Beware: I am both an equipment vendor and an audio engineer. Marty Atias ATS Communications http://ATSComms.com |
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| | #16 |
| Gear addict Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: southeast
Posts: 495
| I stand corrected! Rich |
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| | #17 |
| Gear interested Join Date: Jul 2003 Location: Monterrey MX
Posts: 25
| Hello all! I will be recording a voice conference and translation over 2 different buildings (actually 6 different languages), distance is about 1300 ft. I'm planning to send line level but I want to ask an advice of what kind of troubles I may find. Since this audio is for video only, I'm not too worried about some signal degradation, in my experience video guys have some margin of tolerance (you know the video guys). Thanks. Dr. Cuso
__________________ http://www.apex.com.mx SAWStudio VIP Affiliate |
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| | #18 |
| Gear Head Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: Maryland
Posts: 50
| I think the first thing you should do is gage your client's willingness to accept degraded audio rather than assuming they will. Of course there may need to be a budget balance between good audio & the willingness to pay for it. However, it's not difficult to get really good audio quality at that distance if done right. Are the two buildings occupied by one company? What sort of lines, if any, currently exist between the two buildings? Here are a few thoughts: Is there a data network you could borrow bandwidth from? You could send many channels of cobranet, ethersound, etc. over standard ethernet lines. Could you run your own CAT 5 cable between the buildings? Perhaps talk to the telecom (PBX) contractor about borrowing and routing a few dry pairs. You can send voice thousands of feet with little quality loss if the copper is good. A good wireless mic system with directional Tx & Rx antennas would be capable of 1300 feet.
__________________ Beware: I am both an equipment vendor and an audio engineer. Marty Atias ATS Communications http://ATSComms.com |
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| | #19 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Jul 2006 Location: Santa Clara, CA
Posts: 636
| CobraNet standard emerging? The CobraNet consortium looks promising and some products are already shipping. It seems you'd setup a little ethernet network to pass both audio and control signals, and let one or two cat5 cables carry it between a robotic onstage head-end (consisting of pres->ADC->network terminal) and the truck. CobraNet Community The member list is impressive: Ashly Audio, AudioScience, Biamp, Bosch, Bose KK Japan, BSS Audio, Clear-Com, ClearOne, Commentary Systems, Creative Audio, Crest Audio, Crown, D&R Electronica, dbx Professional Products, Digigram, Digispider, DigiTech, DOD, Dynacord, Eastern Acoustic Works, Electro-Voice, Golden Sound, IED Innovative Electronic Designs, Ivie Technologies, JBL Professional, Klark Teknik, Lab Gruppen, Lance Design, Level Control Systems, Mackie, Media Technology Systems, MIDAS, NOVAR, Peavey, QSC Audio, RANE, Renkus-Heinz, Richmond Sound Design, RTS, Shure, Soundcraft, Symetrix, Telex, Whirlwind, Yamaha |
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| | #20 |
| Gear Head Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: Maryland
Posts: 50
| Cobranet products have been shipping for years, and they are on their second or third generation processor. Some mixers have Cobranet ports built in, and outboard equipment can set up anywhere from a simple point to point transport (ie: Rave) to a multipoint network with full DSP, control & transport (ie: Symnet). Cobranet signals can be carried by ethernet CAT 5, microwave, fiber, and infra-red. There are other multichannel digital transport systems such as Ethersound, and digital snakes from several manufacturers.
__________________ Beware: I am both an equipment vendor and an audio engineer. Marty Atias ATS Communications http://ATSComms.com |
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| | #21 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Oct 2002 Location: St Leonards on Sea, England
Posts: 1,372
| Cobranet (as coolstuff above pointed out) has been around for years, however it has never seemed to penetrate the market such as to become the accepted standard. From my understanding to use the technology you have to license it, those cost ultimately have to be met by the end users. However, Madi which has also been around for a while is starting to get adopted by more and more manufacturers and is free to use. Quite a lot of broadcasters and PA companies are using it now and companies like RME. Digital Audio Denmark, SSL are producing box's to interface other equipment, I suspect this will become the most common "standard" for large channel count installations. Regards Roland |
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| | #22 |
| Gear interested Join Date: Jul 2003 Location: Monterrey MX
Posts: 25
| According to Steve's first post, going line level is good idea "You can run thousands of feet of cable line level without loss".I think signal degradation would be minimal (may be only in theory) and unnoticeable by the video guys. My plan, budget and dead line is limited, so send balanced lines to the truck at line level is the only option I have available. My question is for advice of problems that I may find going this way. Avoid florescent lights? hi voltage lines? Thank you Dr. Cuso |
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| | #23 |
| Gear Head Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: Maryland
Posts: 50
| Any time you run a long line, you can run in to noise problems from power transformers, lighting, RF transmitters, etc. Good transformers at both ends will minimize that risk. You'll have to determine where to lay your cable between buildings, how to route it through the buildings, and what type of cable to use. Safety to pedestrians will be an issue, as well as vehicular traffic if you have to cross a street. You may have to work with and contract a municipal services department if you have to fly a cable across a public street. The telecom line option I mentioned, if available, could be very inexpensive or even free, and could get you between the buildings or even from room to room without having to cable them on your own. Copper is expensive these days. Wireless systems & antennas are rentable and would make quick work of the building hop. Good Luck.
__________________ Beware: I am both an equipment vendor and an audio engineer. Marty Atias ATS Communications http://ATSComms.com |
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