[QuadList] Ampex Models
Chill315 at aol.com
Chill315 at aol.com
Tue Mar 1 07:14:59 CST 2011
Bill
That was a great session at the SMPTE meeting. Yes I do remember Hugo
Bundy. A little bit of a southern character. The state of ENG at that time
was so primitive. The equipment was not designed to do what we were doing.
It was amazing that there were not more issues. The cost benefits were so
great that we had to proceed down that path.
Frank was a great field engineer. I still remember how we spent a long
night trying to resolve why the RA-4000 would not do match frame edits with
the AVR-2's that we had. About 3 in the morning we proved that it was the
boost was still on when the RA-4000 sensed lock and released tape speed over
ride. Then the boost would cause the machine to slip a frame. The
RA-4000 only needed one frame of time code match to say sync was achieved. I had
been going down that road and he was going down the road that the problem
was in the AVR-2. That was because we also had VR-1200's on the RA-4000.
The AVR-2 with the DC capstan was so good at lock up.
Anyway Frank gave me a great saying over this. "Some times you need
someone to come along grab your ears and pull your head out of your rear so you
can see the problem from the right way."
He came up with a fix that worked better than the factory came up with
later when they issued a field bulletin.
Lastly, the ACR-25 was such a great machine. It never broke unless the
smell of burnt plastic was from the melting of the drive hub that mated from
the spools in the cassette acted up.
I saw the RCA machine at other stations and how much they had to do to keep
it going. You guys did it right.
Chris Hill
In a message dated 2/28/2011 9:50:33 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,
wcarpen107 at yahoo.com writes:
Hi Cris and everybody!
Yes, That was a great meeting, and my paper was sort of an alternative
answer to the ENG question. The handwriting was on the wall related to Eng,
when we came back to the Hotel later on Friday night after driving in the
heavy snow and found that the "crackbarrel" session in a small room on the
lower level was attended by maybe 200 engineers mostly out in the halllway,
not the 25-30 that normally go to those unplanned & unstructured sessions.
The next day, a good old southern boy from Atlanta, Hugo Bundy (if my 35+
years memory is right) got up and tore apart every piece equipment that he
had used!
Then he put up a slide of his ACR-25, and stated that without this machine
the whole ENG effort would have been unuseable!
He said they would roll the 3/4" field tapes many times and record each
time until they got the one that worked and then use the ACR to clip the
ends, and also that this would allow last second changes in the news playback
on an "as required" basis with NO PROBLEMS.
The ACR was his last slide and was on-sceen for over half on his paper and
all of the Q & A.
I was sitting next to Don Kleffman, our Marketing Manager, and two levels
above me, when leaned over and asked me if I had anything to do with this
presentation?
I answered NO, but I was sure going to buy the man a drink or more before
the weekend was over! Don was pleased with my answer!
Bill Carpenter
PS: Frank Davis was always a great field engineer and a good friend, both
at Belo, and previously at Northwest Teleproductions.
--- On Mon, 2/28/11, Chill315 at aol.com <Chill315 at aol.com> wrote:
From: Chill315 at aol.com <Chill315 at aol.com>
Subject: [QuadList] Ampex Models
To: quadlist at quadvideotapegroup.com
Date: Monday, February 28, 2011, 4:35 PM
I was not sure of the actual count and I thought there might be 21. The
question was answered with all sorts of speed.
The ones that I thought might be difficult were the E models of the 1100
and the 1200. Also the VR-3000B.
I did see the VR-3000B demonstrated at the Detroit SMPTE meeting as an
alternative to 3/4 tape. It worked beautifully. The operating cost must have
been against it. Frank Davis was at the meeting and manned the booth. He
later became a VP at Belo.
I know of another VR-1200 that had the detachable monitor rack. This was
sold to the University of Michigan Television Center. It was used in the
studio and in a remote truck that only did a few shows in black and white.
There was a monitor setup in the truck.
Now were there any VR-1001B models? The reason that I ask is that the
Intersync book tells about how to install the Intersync in the VR-1001A. Was
it standard in the B model? So who can answer this question?
Chris Hill
-----Inline Attachment Follows-----
_______________________________________________
Please trim posts to relevant info when replying!
Send QuadList list posts to _QuadList at quadvideotapegroup.com_
(mip://06e05ee8/mc/compose?to=QuadList@quadvideotapegroup.com)
Your subscribe, unsubscribe and digest options are here:
_http://mail.quadvideotapegroup.com/mailman/listinfo/quadlist_quadvideotapeg
roup.com_
(http://mail.quadvideotapegroup.com/mailman/listinfo/quadlist_quadvideotapegroup.com)
_______________________________________________
Please trim posts to relevant info when replying!
Send QuadList list posts to QuadList at quadvideotapegroup.com
Your subscribe, unsubscribe and digest options are here:
http://mail.quadvideotapegroup.com/mailman/listinfo/quadlist_quadvideotapegr
oup.com
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://quadvideotapegroup.com/pipermail/quadlist_quadvideotapegroup.com/attachments/20110301/5d66455d/attachment-0005.html>
More information about the QuadList
mailing list