[QuadList] Chris Hill's old favorite TBC--
W4wj at aol.com
W4wj at aol.com
Sun Jul 26 17:05:11 CDT 2009
Years before TBC's hit the ground running, WLTV in Miami would
feed the video from their Akai 1/2" R-R B&W portable videotape
machine into their "Winchester Cathedral Video Converter" to air.
The Converter: A B&W monitor, in a black box with a large viewing hood,
with just enough of an opening for a GE PE-250 to take the shot!!
Crude but cheap, and the "first" ENG tape on the air in Miami!!
Don Murray
Retired from 40 years in Miami Television
35+ years at WTVJ NBC O&O
In a message dated 7/25/2009 7:20:34 P.M. Central Daylight Time,
ted at quadvideotapegroup.com writes:
On Jul 12, 2009, at 8:37 PM, _Chill315 at aol.com_ (mailto:Chill315 at aol.com)
wrote:
There is the old favorite TBC that is all forgiving and allows for unique
control. It is the most beautiful system ever devised. Requires the use
of two pieces of equipment and some care.
Take an under scanned black and white monitor and shoot it with a camera.
Then you have all sorts of control via knobs on the monitor and the
camera. The monitor acts as a beautiful sponge. If you have a fast time
constant in the monitor, then you do not see any flagging. Use a dark room to get
rid of reflections.
I have done that in the past and it works.
Chris Hill
Same idea behind the slow-scan to NTSC frame rate converter for the moon
shots, with an added disc recorder to repeat frames as needed.
I used the same "shoot a monitor" technique when working in a 3/4" suite
that lacked a second TBC for A-B roll.
We had some color composite Commodore computer monitors that we used for
general purposes around the facility. No underscan, but had good pictures for
video or computer signals.
I put one of those in a dark room, put tape over the camera tally light
and with bars on the screen adjusted framing, zoom and focus as needed to get
the image size needed with minimum Moiré.
With a properly chipped 3-Saticon camera, I found that I usually needed to
reduce the brightness, contrast and saturation on the monitor but got a
very nice picture I could shade from the CCU if needed.
Like horror movie SFX, it worked well if you didn't keep full-screen stuff
up longer than needed to get through the transition and to the next cut.
Picture-in-picture shots worked better, and I'd put the monitor in a box
wipe to eliminate any curved edges of the monitor.
Ah, the olden days when chewing gum and bailing wire were still useable.
Ted
Ted Langdell
Secretary
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