[QuadList] Introductions
Joe Owens
jpo at prestodigital.ca
Wed Aug 6 11:22:30 CDT 2008
I feel like a total junior here... didn't spend much time with
engineering Quads, but I do have a special fondness for them as an
operator.
My history with Quad tape spanned 1976-1985. I worked in two
facilities; an on-air station in Saskatoon, Sask (Canada), and a high-
end post house in Toronto. The on-air station was an RCA house, but
converted to AMPEX when Type-C took over with VPR-2s. Then they went
SONY. The Toronto house was AMPEX all the way.
I worked first as an engineer, then as an operator/editor at the TV
station, which had five machines in its tape room and two in a truck
for location taping.
The machines (as I recall) consisted of: one TR-70C, used for
mastering and editing "Hi-Band" commercial programming (no timecode)
two TR-60s, used for on-air program and commercial playback
('short' run) and donor source video for production
one TR-4(5?) Lo-band recorder for programming tape delay, and
one TR-3 (?) Lo-band recorder, also for tape delay.
The VTRs in the truck were also TR-3's if I've got that right -- they
were the horizontal flat-bed type recorders.
We avoided Lo-band where we could, but because half the machines in
the mix were Lo-band only, scheduling was critical. Lots of midnight
and very early AM shifts doing the commercial runs for the day --
this was before the availability of a cart machine for this market.
Eventually they installed a Betacart-- circa 1986.
It was during this time that VT playback traffic went from somewhere
around 70-80 plays a day to north of 250, so the department was under
enormous pressure, handling commercial on-air, program delay,
production, news, etc., all with ONE operator and a supervisor -- who
was mostly concerned with file management and traffic rather than
actual operation.
I worked as an on-line editor / vision-mixer at the post facility in
Toronto (VTR on Scollard) where five Super-HiBand AVR-3's were in
service; three directly controlled by an RA-(4000?) editor (with a
Vital Squeezoom!) for A/B Roll editing, and two more for duplication,
wild recordings, studio recording, etc. Several 7.5 ips recording
heads were acquired for feature-length capability when the facility
became a film-transfer point for the new home-video market. The
important thing was to re-adjust the erase-delay before use!
There was originally one VPR-2 (which got "Merlin'ed), and
later 3 VPR-3's showed up (late 1984?) with an ACE and two ADO's.
And I suspect those same three VPR-3's continued their careers in
Edmonton when the Toronto company demised a couple of years later.
Its been 23 years, but if there's any little practical hands-on thing
that might help.... We needed to do a lot of on-the-spot things, not
many of them orthodox, to keep them "on-the-air"! I believe they all
had personalities, like dogs or Douglas Adams' "Marvin", in the
Hitchhikers' Guide to the Galaxy.
Joe Owens
Presto!Digital Colourgrade
302-9664 106 Avenue
Edmonton, Alberta T5H0N4
+1 780 421-9980
jpo at prestodigital.ca
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