[QuadList] South Carolina ETV was (Quad on the Air!) now Dage 520
couryhouse at aol.com
couryhouse at aol.com
Wed Jan 13 02:31:58 CST 2010
This is outstanding! Do you have any photos of you using one? can we
add you name to this to add this to the website for the museum?
Thanks!!!
Now to find out a bit about the station these came from.....
Ed# _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org) In a message dated 1/13/2010
12:58:54 A.M. US Mountain Standard Time, dlamm1 at neo.rr.com writes:
[snip]
I need model # of this, I need manuals... would be fin to have the
rest of the guts... has a big ass plug that hooks to a ccu... also need
tripods and pedestals for them and i want to set one of the camera up with a
full turret of lenses so we need lenses to fit it... but most of all....
wanna hear how these were used and where and maybe some stills of them in
use.
[end]
Those are Dage 520's. They were mono Vidicon cameras. This is confirmed by
7735 tube type numbers in one of your pix. My understanding is that Dage
equipment was popular with educational institutions. The company I once
worked for (both a UHF broadcaster and an equipment dealer) sold Dage and other
brands to colleges. We even used a pair of them on our B & W remote unit,
along with a Dynair switcher, Riker sync gen and RCA TR-5 quad. Back in
1970, this wasn't too bad a setup for a small town station. The color truck had
PC-70's.
That big connector has been around at least since the days of a TK-11
camera. Nearly every domestic camera maker with split camera-CCU used it. In
the color realm, it was TV-81 and TV-85 nomenclature, IIRC. The CCU's you seek
are just 2RU tall. Dage could take a zoom lens, as your pix show. We only
had one of those, the second 520 used C-mount fixed lenses.
520's weren't too heavy. One person could place them on a Hercules tripod
easily. Being Vidicon, they were almost unusable doing night high-school
football games at your typical 1970's era stadium. Pretty much a daytime
camera. I am still amazed that our sales department could line up any sponsors
for some of the horrible quality tape we dragged back to the studio after
shooting a Friday night football game. Towards the end of their life at our
station, the best 520 got to be the scoreboard camera in the color truck.
Hardly a glorious end to one's career.
To a kid of 17 working his first job in broadcasting, a 520 was a
magnificent triumph of engineering, exceeded only by a quad tape machine.
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